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The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn vs. One Flew Over the Cuc


It is true that he starts his journey with the idea that he will take Jim to freedom up the Ohio River, it does not stop the trip downstream once they discover they have passed Cairo. It is evident that what matters most to Huck is the motion itself. The moments when Huck is happiest are when he is on the raft. It is his home away from home and offers his the freedom a person like is always in search of. This happiness is sustained through descriptions of life on the raft. At the end of Chapter 18 he emphasizes, .
             "We said there warn't no home like a raft, after all. Other places do seem so cramped up and smothery, but a raft don't. You feel mighty free and easy and comfortable on a raft" (Twain, 338). .
             What really attracts the reader's attention in this work is the concepts behind these two traveling men--their energy, their resilience, their superior wit over the townsfolk and the way they satirically present it--these qualities construct the idea that life on the road brings out the human characteristics most worthy of our admiration. With this idea comes the central metaphor of the river. It is crucial to the "flow" of the story. It is not only a road, but a moving road, bringing items of metaphoric importance with it, such as rafts, fish, etc. while also subliminally guiding the travelers as they journey onward. The best thing about being in motion on a raft is the way in life goes on in a subtle but unforeseeable direction. One doe not have to worry about frivolous realities on shore. The real importance is that each moment actually created then suspend by the motion of the river.
             The theme of community in this story also plays off of the sense of motion. The only community which Huck has any experience with is the band of travelers who have unexpectedly united on the raft. The journey have created and emphasized certain values which are important to Huck. Huck always feels an obligation to satisfy everyone on the raft.


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