Sunday, September 1, 2019
Huckleberry Finn’s Moral Compass
Nathan Walker Mr. Dickenson Period 3 1/7/12 Critic Keith Neilson writes, ââ¬Å"And so Huckleberry Finn ends, one of the saddest happy endings in literature. Jim is free, after an awful initiation that nearly gets him lynched. Tom is almost killed, yet learns nothing from the experience. But Huckââ¬â¢s loss seems the greatest of all. After finally letting his heart overcome all of the prejudices and moral inhibitions that society has put into his head, having determined to defy society to ââ¬Ëgo whole hogââ¬â¢ to rescue his friend Jim, he meets Tom Sawyer and immediately crawls back under Tomââ¬â¢s Romantic Wing.Huckââ¬â¢s character and moral nature seem violatedâ⬠¦One of the greatest characters in literature has been forced to go backwards and we feel cheated. â⬠For years, critics have argued over the ending of Huckleberry Finn. Critics tear apart theà racial content, issues about gender and sexuality, and most interestingly the ongoing controversy over th e final chapters. The debate remainsà regardingà whether or not Twain wrote the ending with a purpose, or if he just took an easy way out. For example, the ending comes abruptly.In addition, readers are upset aboutà how Huck disappears and Tom reemerges. On the other hand, others feel that the ending is a masterpiece. Personally, I can see both sides of the debate. On one hand, it seems that Twain created a masterpiece just to throw it away at the end. We see that Huck, who we were rooting for all along, has not changed and will continue to carry out Tomââ¬â¢s whims and fantasies. All the progress he has made with Jim has been destroyed. This is one of the manyà aspects that make the novel picaresque. On the other hand however, I can see why Twain did what he did.In order to be honest with Huckââ¬â¢s character, Twain could not have allowed Huck to become the hero. Furthermore, in the time period of the Southern 1800? s, if Huck had changed his ways, society would have been shocked. If society hated the book, Twainââ¬â¢s message would not have been so wide spread as it was, as the book would have probably banned. Another possible idea is that Twain wanted to make his readerââ¬â¢s wonder, and leave them to make their own decisions. One thing is sure however, either way you translate the ending; Twain sure knows how to stir controversy.
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