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Huckleberry Finn & On the Road

ction of the story. In particular, he sees a parallel between Dante's and Twain's treatment of evil, as expressed in the ne'er-do-well characters that Jim and Huck meet on their way down river: "Huck's adventures are a progression from contact with and endangerment by incontinence, through violence, through fraud" (389). The encounter with the Duke and the Dauphin is a case in point. At first, Jim and Huck sympathize with the depths to which they say they have fallen, "majestying" them until their concern with Jim's slave status, together with their progressively worse behavior as they move down river--selling the estate and slaves of Peter Wilks, collecting a reward for turning Jim over to the authorities, and so on--lends meaning to Huck's statement that it didn't take him long "to make up my mind that these li

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Huckleberry Finn & On the Road. (1969, December 31). In LotsofEssays.com. Retrieved 14:18, April 29, 2024, from https://www.lotsofessays.com/viewpaper/1712106.html