In the
final chapters of Huck Finn, I see a moral digression in Huck. Tom Sawyer is
having the effect that I thought he would have on Huck’s behavior: he’s a bad
influence on him. They play a few pranks to pass the time between trying to get
Jim out of the cabin. The boys constantly steal and replace spoons when Aunt
Sally is trying to count them so that she wouldn’t notice the fact that the
boys were sneaking things to her captive. Jim and Huck continue to follow
everything that Tom says, because that’s how the books do it. The boys try to
roll a grindstone into the cabin so Jim can carve on it, like in prison. One of
the most childish scenes in the entire novel ensues during this period of moral
decay for Huck. The boys think that its a good idea to put creepy crawlies in
Jim’s cabin to commemorate his final night of captivity.
The final
escape of Jim is hectic and uncalled for. The Phelps’s show up to their house with
a mob to stop the “bandits” from stealing Jim. Huck and Tom, luckily, have the
tunnel that they dug to get Jim out still intact. During there mad dash for the
raft, Tom is shot and Jim, once again, shows his caring and nurturing side. He
wont move until Tom is taken to the doctor. During this crisis, we see Huck
grow morally because he now takes control of the situation. He makes a decision
based on common sense and logic. Toms plan to get a doctor is intricate and unnecessary,
so instead, Huck trusts his own ability to lie and retrieve the doctor the
treat Tom.