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Jim Is The Most Ruined Servant In Huck Finn

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Even though Jim is not in every scene of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn , Mark Twain focuses the novel around Jim. The book does not start with Jim but it introduces him as the “most ruined servant,”(pg 8). Jim was help up on account of having seen the devil and witches before. To other slaves, Jim must’ve been supernatural to live through and experience like his. After both Huck Finn and Jim run away from their homes they end up on a raft together. On this raft they are trying to escape their cruel lives of a slave and an abused child. Huck has been raised to think that black people were only slave; not having emotions, like a farm animal. The longer that they spend time together on the raft the mosre Huck learns about Jim and realizes

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