Chapter 16: Believing themselves
to be close to freedom now, Huck begins to feel guilty for having helped Jim escape. Southern society
has taught him that freeing a slave is a sin, and Huck starts to worry that he will go to hell.
Being forced to postpone these thoughts
for later, however, Huck is confronted by men who are looking for fugitive slaves. Wanting to search
the raft for the slaves, the men begin to row out to it. Huck, however, ingeniously dissuades the men
from such action by telling them that his father is onboard and has smallpox. Instead of helping, the
men give Huck some money in charity.
Later, now night, Huck and Jim jump overboard and are separated when a much larger vessel cuts their
little raft into two pieces. Huck nearly drowns, but manages to reach shore, not having heard any sign
of Jim.
Chapter 17: Now on land, Huck
walks a few paces before he hears a male voice yelling at him from a nearby house window. Apparently
he has reached the Grangerford family headquarters. When asked who he is, Huck tells the man that his
name is George Jackson and that he has just fallen off the steamboat. Taking him inside, the man examines
Huck by candlelight, convinced that he isn't a Shepherdson, the name of the family with which the Grangerfords
are feuding. The Grangerford
family takes Huck in, and he admits that they were really nice. The ironic thing is, despite their
obsession with feuding, the family seems to be very religious. Twain obviously uses this to further
his indictment of religion.
Chapter 18: Huck's education continues.
He learns that the Grangerford family is practically part of the aristocracy. The other competing aristocracy
in town seems to be the Shepherdsons. The families are feuding, Huck is told, because of some dispute
that happened many years ago. When he asks what the nature of the dispute was, no one knows. All of
this seems quite ridiculous to Huck.
Soon word reaches the house that Miss Sophia, the beautiful daughter of the household, has run away
to elope with a young man from the Shepherdson family. This immediately causes all the men of the house
to fetch their guns and prepare for battle. Traveling with Buck, Huck himself sees the bloodshed first-hand.
All of it, however, makes him sick to his stomach, especially when he sees Buck killed.
Luckily, he meets Jim in the woods, and the two of them
run back towards the river, away from the senseless feuding.
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