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Huck Finn and the Scarlet Letter are novels that have a common bond in that both novels show an extraordinarily realistic view of society. ... Throughout these two novels society’s opinion effects the characters of these books in different ways, Huck is a boy with good morals who has a false sense of what good really is, Jim, an African American who is treated as “second class“ although his noble deeds prove otherwise, and Pearl who feels destined to follow a path of sin, like her adulteress mother Hester. ... This is also the case in Mark Twain’s Huck Finn. Huck as the title suggests is the main character. In Huck Finn, Huck is born with a wonderful set of morals, and he makes a lot of good decisions. ... It is society that causes Huck to feel this way,
As his views often express opinions that were quite common during that time-period. ... Thinking life might be better if he was to go back with Miss Watson, Huck writes a letter exposing the location of Jim. However, Huck thinks of Jim’s freedom and their friendship and decides to shred the letter. For one of the first times in the novel, Huck does an act to help Jim without feeling remorseful.
Approximate Word count = 1050 Approximate Pages = 4.2 (250 words per page double spaced)
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