Friday, October 25, 2019
The novel The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, written by Samuel L. Essa
The novel The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, written by Samuel L.   Clemens, whose pen name was Mark Twain, presents the evils of southern   societies during the pre-Civil War period in America.    The novel The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, written by Samuel L.  Clemens, whose pen name was Mark Twain, presents the evils of southern  societies during the pre-Civil War period in America. Clemens, a  well-respected author, "began writing The Adventures of Huckleberry  Finn in 1876 and, after several stops and starts, completed it in  1883" (19). This novel revolves around the theme of slavery versus  freedom, and was published at a time when most southern landowners  still "owned" slaves. Huck Finn is a novel that incorporates the  struggles of a young boy, Huck Finn, with that of a cruel, careless  world, on his travel down the Mississippi River in attempt at finding  his own identity. In this essay, I will present textual evidence that  proves that the Seven Deadly Sins are directly associated with the  types of evil in the novel, making Huck's world one of violence,  terror, and death. The Seven Deadly Sins will be discussed according  to their significance throughout the novel, beginning with: 1.) Pride;  2.) Avarice and Sloth; 3.) Gluttony and Wrath; and 4.) Envy and Lust.    Clemens' main character, Huck Finn, experiences a great deal of  violence throughout the novel as a direct result of the most  significant Deadly Sin, Pride. Huck's father, Pap, is a drunkard who  continuously exemplifies the sin of Pride. Pap finds extreme Pride in  the "white man" with the legality of slavery. An example of his Pride  is seen when an inebriated Pap verbally attacks free blacks in the  States. He states, "It was 'lection day, and I was...              ...usion, the Seven Deadly Sins of Pride, Avarice, Sloth,  Gluttony, Wrath, Envy, and Lust are significant in the novel with  making Huck's world full of violence and death. The deadly sins  committed throughout the work produce an undesirable life for society,  and much less for a child of Huck's age. The wondrous adventure that  Huck assumes he will take on at the beginning of the novel, becomes no  match to the evils that the young boy will view on his journey. The  Seven Deadly Sins are all directly linked to the evils that Huck  experiences. Huck's eventful, yet horrific adventure becomes the base  for which he is forced into manhood. The Adventures of Huckleberry  Finn takes the audience from "the endless summer of childhood  pleasures.", found in Clemens' The Adventures of Tom Sawyer to the  "violence, terror, and death that lurk at the edges of the  village"(19).                      
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