The Adventures
of Huckleberry Finn
by
Mark Twain
(Plot
Overview)
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn opens by
familiarizing us with the events of the novel that preceded it, The Adventures
of Tom Sawyer. Both novels are set in the town of St. Petersburg, Missouri, which
lies on the banks of the Mississippi River. At the end of Tom Sawyer,
Huckleberry Finn, a poor boy with a drunken bum for a father, and his friend
Tom Sawyer, a middle-class boy with an imagination too active for his own good,
found a robber’s stash of gold. As a result of his adventure, Huck gained quite
a bit of money, which the bank held for him in trust. Huck was adopted by the
Widow Douglas, a kind but stifling woman who lives with her sister, the
self-righteous Miss Watson.
As
Huckleberry Finn opens, Huck is not very happy with his new life of
cleanliness, manners, church, and school. However, he sticks it out at the
request of Tom Sawyer, who tells him that in order to take part in Tom’s new
“robbers’ gang,” Huck must stay “respectable.” All is well and good until
Huck’s brutish, drunken father, Pap, reappears in town and demands Huck’s
money. The local judge, Judge Thatcher, and the Widow try to get legal custody
of Huck, but another new judge in town believes in the rights of Huck’s natural
father and even takes the old drunk into his own home in order to reform him.
This effort fails miserably, and Pap soon returns to his old ways. He hangs around
town for several months, harassing his son, who in the meantime has learned to
read under the guidance of the Widow. Finally, outraged when the Widow Douglas
warns him to stay away from her house, Pap kidnaps Huck and holds him in a
cabin across the river from St. Petersburg.
Whenever
Pap goes out, he locks Huck in the cabin, and when he returns home drunk, he
beats the boy. Tired of his confinement and fearing the beatings will worsen,
Huck escapes from Pap by faking his own death, killing a pig and spreading its
blood all over the cabin. Hiding on Jackson’s Island in the middle of the
Mississippi River, Huck watches the townspeople search the river for his body.
After a few days on the island, he encounters Jim, one of Miss Watson’s slaves.
Jim has run away from Miss Watson after hearing her talk about selling him to a
plantation down the river, where he would be treated horribly and separated
from his wife and children. Huck and Jim team up, despite Huck’s uncertainty
about the legality or morality of helping a runaway slave. While they camp out
on the island, a great storm causes the Mississippi to flood. Huck and Jim spy
a log raft and a house floating past the island. They capture the raft and loot
the house, finding in it the body of a man who has been shot. Jim refuses to
let Huck see the dead man’s face.
Although
the island is blissful, Huck and Jim are forced to leave after Huck learns from
a woman onshore that her husband has seen smoke coming from the island and
believes that Jim is hiding out there. Huck also learns that a reward has been
offered for Jim’s capture. Huck and Jim start downriver on the raft, intending
to leave it at the mouth of the Ohio River and proceed up that river by
steamboat to the free states, where slavery is prohibited.
Several
days’ travel takes them past St. Louis, and they have a close encounter with a
gang of robbers on a wrecked steamboat. They manage to escape with the robbers’
loot. During a night of thick fog, Huck
and Jim miss the mouth of the Ohio and encounter a group of men looking for runaway
slaves. Huck has a brief moral crisis about concealing stolen “property”—Jim, after
all, belongs to Miss Watson—but then lies to the men and tells them that his
father is on the raft suffering from smallpox. Terrified of the disease, the
men give Huck money and hurry away. Unable to backtrack to the mouth of the
Ohio, Huck and Jim continue downriver. The next night, a steamboat slams into
their raft, and Huck and Jim are separated.
Huck
reaches the home of the kindly Grangerfords, a family of Southern aristocrats
involved in a bitter and silly feud with a neighboring clan, the Shepherdsons.
The elopement of a Grangerford daughter with a Shepherdson son leads to a gun
battle in which many in the families are killed. While Huck is caught up in the
feud, Jim shows up with the repaired raft. Huck hurries to Jim’s hiding place,
and they take off down the river.
A
few days later, Huck and Jim rescue a pair of men who are being pursued by
armed bandits. The men, clearly con artists, claim to be a displaced English
duke (the duke) and the long-lost heir to the French throne (the dauphin).
Powerless to tell two white adults to leave, Huck and Jim continue down the river
with the pair of “aristocrats.” The duke and the dauphin pull several scams in
the small towns along the river. Coming into one town, they hear the story of a
man, Peter Wilks, who has recently died and left much of his inheritance to his
two brothers, who should be arriving from England any day. The duke and the
dauphin enter the town pretending to be Wilks’s brothers. Wilks’s three nieces
welcome the con men and quickly set about liquidating the estate. A few townspeople
become skeptical, and Huck, who admires the Wilks sisters, decides to thwart
the scam. He steals the dead Peter Wilks’s gold from the duke and the dauphin
but is forced to hide it in Wilks’s coffin. Huck then reveals all to the eldest
Wilks sister, Mary Jane. Huck’s plan for exposing the duke and the dauphin is
about to unfold when Wilks’s real brothers arrive from England. The angry
townspeople hold both sets of Wilks claimants, and the duke and the dauphin
just barely escape in the ensuing confusion. Fortunately for the sisters, the
gold is found. Unfortunately for Huck and Jim, the duke and the dauphin make it
back to the raft just as Huck and Jim are pushing off.
After
a few more small scams, the duke and dauphin commit their worst crime yet: they
sell Jim to a local farmer, telling him that Jim is a runaway for whom a large
reward is being offered. Huck finds out where Jim is being held and resolves to
free him. At the house where Jim is a prisoner, a woman greets Huck excitedly
and calls him “Tom.” As Huck quickly discovers, the people holding Jim are none
other than Tom Sawyer’s aunt and uncle, Silas and Sally Phelps. The Phelps
mistake Huck for Tom, who is due to arrive for a visit, and Huck goes along with
their mistake. He intercepts Tom between the Phelps house and the steamboat
dock, and Tom pretends to be his own younger brother, Sid.
Tom
hatches a wild plan to free Jim, adding all sorts of unnecessary obstacles even
though Jim is only lightly secured. Huck is sure Tom’s plan will get them all
killed, but he complies. After a seeming eternity of pointless preparation,
during which the boys ransack the Phelps’s house and make Aunt Sally miserable,
they put the plan into action. Jim is freed, but a pursuer shoots Tom in the
leg. Huck is forced to get a doctor, and Jim sacrifices his freedom to nurse
Tom. All return to the Phelps’s house, where Jim ends up back in chains.
When
Tom wakes the next morning, he reveals that Jim has actually been a free man all
along, as Miss Watson, who made a provision in her will to free Jim, died two
months earlier. Tom had planned the entire escape idea all as a game and had
intended to pay Jim for his troubles. Tom’s Aunt Polly then shows up,
identifying “Tom” and “Sid” as Huck and Tom. Jim tells Huck, who fears for his
future—particularly that his father might reappear—that the body they found on
the floating house off Jackson’s Island had been Pap’s. Aunt Sally then steps
in and offers to adopt Huck, but Huck, who has had enough “civilizing,” announces
his plan to set out for the West.
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