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In The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, by Mark Twain, we see change. ... Huckleberry Finn’s conscience grows throughout the novel. ...
In the beginning of the novel we meet the main character, Huckleberry Finn. ... Then there was the Widow Douglas, she took Huck Finn into her house and tried to civilize him, but he didn’t like her very much, so she had small affect on his life. ... Huck Finn joins a “Band of Robbers” with local boys and now these boys pretend to be robbers, although they really are not. ... Because Huck Finn did not have any influential authority to teach him about ethics, his conscience is solely based upon what he sees as right vs. ...
Later on in the novel, the most climatic scene takes place with Huck Finn and a struggle with his conscience. ... And then he realizes that the word would spread that Huck Finn helped a runaway slave, and at the time that was not a good thing to be known for.
Approximate Word count = 1378 Approximate Pages = 5.5 (250 words per page double spaced)
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