Wednesday, April 30, 2008
Huck Finn-Summary
Tom and Huck have all these things that they need to get for Jim and one of the things was a spoon. Aunt Sally noticed that one of them were gone and during breakfast they also realized a bunch of other things were gone. Everyone kept finding excuses for the things missing and never blamed it on someone stealing it. They ended up finding the spoon in Uncle Silas's jacket and then Huck and Tom decided that he wasn't a reliable person so they would have to use Aunt Sally to get the things to Jim. They then played a joke on Aunt Sally with the spoons. She would count them and there would be 10, but when she counted again there would be 9 and that went on for awhile. They also did that with the other items that Jim needed. Also in these chapters they were with Jim and they went to go get him a rock so he could write what he wanted to on it, but it was too heavy so they snuck him out of the hut and Jim helped them get the rock into the hut. They also made a pie for the black slave watching Jim, for his witch project, and they put the rope in it for Jim. Then they were with Jim in his hut and Tom kept saying everything that Jim needed to do while he was a prisoner because all the things he was saying is what real prisoners do. They were absurd things some examples would be the rattle snake, spiders, play music for the spiders, have a mouse, watering a plant with his tears and scratching words into a rock. Jim didn't really like the idea of any of these things, but he said that he wasn't being a very good prisoner so he would just do what he was told from now on. I thought everything Tom was saying and having Jim do was funny. They are things that are so ridiculous it was funny.
Tuesday, April 29, 2008
Huck Finn-deformed conscience
One major influence in Huck's life would be the people he grew up around. For example he has been taught that black people aren't equal to white people and that they should never be treated the same as white people. He also thought that they have different feelings than white people until he is around Jim more. One time Huck got to thinking about what he was doing by helping Jim escape, and that got on his conscience about how he was doing a horrible thing and was going to hell for it, which is ironic because we know that in actuality he was doing the best thing possible any morally right person would do. His father has also deformed his conscience because he grew up with his father and watched him do and say things that weren't right, but how was Huck to know any different? One example would be when Huck was going to take something and he called it "borrowing" because that is what his father always had said. Tom explained to Huck that it was actually stealing, not borrowing. There are many things that he has picked up from his father that he doesn't actually realize because he thought they were okay.
I believe that these influences are still in the world today. People don't even realize how much society and family members influence our everyday life. We watch everyone around us and learn from them what is right and what is wrong, even if their deceptions of right and wrong are wrong, and we know no different. People speak their mind all the time and we take all this information and store it into our own minds because we think it is right.
There are a lot of forces available to try and change the "deformed conscience" and there are also many more rights for black people. Before black people couldn't even do something without asking and now they are running for president and I think it is a wonderful thing that makes people realize they aren't any different than white people are. Of course, there are still racist people in the world today and they have their mind set about their beliefs because that is how they grew up, that is what they learned.
I believe that these influences are still in the world today. People don't even realize how much society and family members influence our everyday life. We watch everyone around us and learn from them what is right and what is wrong, even if their deceptions of right and wrong are wrong, and we know no different. People speak their mind all the time and we take all this information and store it into our own minds because we think it is right.
There are a lot of forces available to try and change the "deformed conscience" and there are also many more rights for black people. Before black people couldn't even do something without asking and now they are running for president and I think it is a wonderful thing that makes people realize they aren't any different than white people are. Of course, there are still racist people in the world today and they have their mind set about their beliefs because that is how they grew up, that is what they learned.
Monday, April 28, 2008
Huck Finn-Chapters 31-34
I think that Huck is a round character because he has undergone so many psychological changes throughout the book. I think his decision making and the way he views the world has changed. At the beginning of the book he was naive and didn't understand right from wrong. After the king and the duke, I think he realizes what you do affects other people no matter right or wrong. He even feels bad when the king and the duke take the money so he tells Mary Jane everything about them. Another example would be how Huck now has more feelings toward Jim than he had before when he just thought of him as a slave. He cares what happens to him because of all they have been through together.
I believe Jim is a flat character because we really haven't seen him change much at all. In fact the only times we do see him, he is still naive and doesn't fully understand what is going on. One example would be when he thought the king and the duke were really a king and a duke. Another time was when the slave showed Huck and Tom the runaway black person who ended up being Jim and Jim shouted out like he knew them, which wasn't a smart idea and could have got them caught. Jim has always cared for Huck, and still does after all they've been through together.
I believe Jim is a flat character because we really haven't seen him change much at all. In fact the only times we do see him, he is still naive and doesn't fully understand what is going on. One example would be when he thought the king and the duke were really a king and a duke. Another time was when the slave showed Huck and Tom the runaway black person who ended up being Jim and Jim shouted out like he knew them, which wasn't a smart idea and could have got them caught. Jim has always cared for Huck, and still does after all they've been through together.
Tuesday, April 22, 2008
Huckleberry Finn-Chapters 24-26
Huck is changing as a person throughout this whole book. I can tell this because when the book first started he was young and naive and didn't quite understand right from wrong yet. In these chapters you can tell dramatically that he understands what is right and wrong because he is going to take the money from the frauds so he can give it back to Mary Jane and her sisters because he realizes it isn't right.
Huck has been able to learn through his experiences what is right and what is wrong. He has been able to learn more morals and I think he realizes how good the widow was to him because everything he is learning now she had tried to teach him. He realizes that what the king and the duke are doing is wrong and he feels bad for Mary Jane and the other girls so that shows that he is maturing and understanding what is happening around him because before he was young and innocent and didn't fully understand. Jim still thinks that they are really a king and a duke and Huck never even cares to tell him the truth because it would be too hard to explain, which shows he understands more than Jim does in the real world now and he is only a young boy while Jim is older.
Huck and Jim were really close when they first found each other on the island, but now that Huck is growing up and sometimes I wonder if he doesn't wonder if they really should be doing what they are doing. After Huck and Jim run into the king and the duke, Huck doesn't have much to do with Jim now because he is always with the king and the duke on land and because Jim is black he can't go with them everywhere. I don't even know what Jim did while they were on land being Mr.Wilk's brothers. But if the king and the duke weren't involved with them I believe Jim and Huck would be closer. Jim still thinks that they are really a king and a duke and Huck never even cares to tell him the truth because it would be too hard to explain, which shows he understands more than Jim does in the real world now.
Huck has been able to learn through his experiences what is right and what is wrong. He has been able to learn more morals and I think he realizes how good the widow was to him because everything he is learning now she had tried to teach him. He realizes that what the king and the duke are doing is wrong and he feels bad for Mary Jane and the other girls so that shows that he is maturing and understanding what is happening around him because before he was young and innocent and didn't fully understand. Jim still thinks that they are really a king and a duke and Huck never even cares to tell him the truth because it would be too hard to explain, which shows he understands more than Jim does in the real world now and he is only a young boy while Jim is older.
Huck and Jim were really close when they first found each other on the island, but now that Huck is growing up and sometimes I wonder if he doesn't wonder if they really should be doing what they are doing. After Huck and Jim run into the king and the duke, Huck doesn't have much to do with Jim now because he is always with the king and the duke on land and because Jim is black he can't go with them everywhere. I don't even know what Jim did while they were on land being Mr.Wilk's brothers. But if the king and the duke weren't involved with them I believe Jim and Huck would be closer. Jim still thinks that they are really a king and a duke and Huck never even cares to tell him the truth because it would be too hard to explain, which shows he understands more than Jim does in the real world now.
Friday, April 18, 2008
Huckleberry-chapter 23
They do a play, which isn't much of a play. The king crawls across the stage naked and all painted up colorful. The crowd got mad but since they didn't want to look stupid they told everyone it was a good play and so the second night they had a good crowd again. The third night though they had a big crowd but they all had rotten fruit and dead animals to throw at them. They collected the fees and went to the raft and got away from that town. I think Twain is trying to make fun of people who are sneaky and get away with things that other people don't realize right in front of their faces. It seems so obvious but people don't always realize.
Then they are floating down the river and Jim is talking about how he had beat his daughter because he didn't realize she was deaf and dumb. He feels bad and Huck says "i do believe he cared just as much for his people as white folks does for their'n." This shows just how much he has learned in his life that black people don't have the same feelings as white people and that they aren't exactly the same as white people even though they are.
Then they are floating down the river and Jim is talking about how he had beat his daughter because he didn't realize she was deaf and dumb. He feels bad and Huck says "i do believe he cared just as much for his people as white folks does for their'n." This shows just how much he has learned in his life that black people don't have the same feelings as white people and that they aren't exactly the same as white people even though they are.
Thursday, April 17, 2008
Huckleberry Finn- Chapter 22
They (a mob) went to hang Sherburn who explained to them from his roof that they were cowards and they realized everything he was saying was true and they left. Sherburn was actually smart about his confrontation with the mob. Then Huck went to the circus where a drunk man wanted to ride a horse and the ringmaster let him. He ended up fooling everyone because he wasn't really drunk, he was just another part of the show. They had their play, but it wasn't successful so the duke made another handbill about another play that only admitted males. He thought that would get people wondering and want to go then. When I am reading this chapter, don't people wonder who they are? Town people usually know everyone else in the town, and if no one ever saw them before, wouldn't they question why they are there?
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