Troublesome To Do Right, discusses the morality of Huck in "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" by Mark Twain

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Troublesome To Do Right With his novel The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Mark Twain was able to poke, prod, and cast doubt on the society he grew up in. But he did it subtly, through the eyes of a child. When Huck questions something, it is Twain's unobtrusive way of pointing out the moral flaws of his society. And more specifically, "The dynamic theme throughout [The Adventures of] Huckleberry Finn is the unresolved dialectic between …

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…the time to fully review all the pros and the cons of the decision they were making. Mark Twain urges us to decide for our selves, and by having Huck question his morals and those of the people around him, we in turn question our own. And as long as we question and reexamine our motives we will not find our selves looking back with guilt and regret on decisions we made in the past.