Mississippi River Symbolism
Mississippi River Symbolism
Mississippi River Symbolism
Introduction
Bryant, a New Englander by birth, attracted attention in his 23rd year when the first
version of his poem “Thanatopsis” (1817) appeared. This, as well as some later poems,
was written under the influence of English 18th-century poets. Still later, however,
under the influence of Wordsworth and other Romantics, he wrote nature lyrics that
vividly represented the New England scene. Turning to journalism, he had a long career
as a fighting liberal editor of The Evening Post. He himself was overshadowed, in
renown at least, by a native-born New Yorker, Washington Irving.
Samuel Langhorne Clemens (Mark Twain) was allied with literary comedians and local
colourists. As a printer’s apprentice, he knew and emulated the prewar sectional
humorists. He rose to prominence in days when Artemus Ward, Bret Harte, and their
followers were idols of the public. His first books, The Innocents Abroad (1869)
and Roughing It (1872), like several of later periods, were travel books in which
affiliations with postwar professional humorists were clearest. The Adventures of Tom
Sawyer (1876), Life on the Mississippi (1883), and The Adventures of Huckleberry
Finn (1884), his best works, which re-created the life of the Mississippi valley in the
past, were closest to the work of older humorists and local colourists. Despite his flaws,
he was one of America’s greatest writers. He was a very funny man. He had more skill
than his teachers in selecting evocative details, and he had a genius for characterization.
Mark Twain was an American humorist, novelist, and travel writer. Today he is best remembered as the
author of The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1876) and Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1885). Twain is
widely considered one of the greatest American writers of all time.
During his lifetime Mark Twain wrote more than 20 novels. His most famous novels
included The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1876) and Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1884),
which are loosely based on Twain’s boyhood experiences in Missouri. Twain
Mark Twain is one of the most famous and beloved American writers of all time. His novels,
stories, and nonfiction writing, such as The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and The Innocents Abroad,
are prized for their humorous portrayals of 19th century America. He was a bestselling author
and celebrity in his own time and has continued to be widely read 100 years after his death.
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, the sequel to The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, was published in
1885. Today, the book is often considered one of the greatest American novels, largely for its
satiric view of the racist attitudes in the pre-Civil War South. The book focuses on its trouble-
making young hero, Huck, helping an escaped slave named Jim. Huck does this even though
he's been taught that helping a slave escape is a sin and will doom him to hell.
Today, Huckleberry Finn is prized for its satire (its use of humor to shed light on social and
political problems) of the racist attitudes of a society based on slavery. But it is important to
remember the book was published 20 years after the end of the Civil War and the banning of
slavery in the 13th Amendment to the Constitution. Twain was looking back on the racist ideas
of his childhood and using them to illuminate problems that still existed after the Civil War.
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Huck runs away from his abusive father and, with his companion, the runaway
slave Jim, makes a long and frequently interrupted voyage down
the Mississippi River on a raft. During the journey Huck encounters a variety
of characters and types in whom the book memorably portrays almost every
class living on or along the river. As a result of these experiences, Huck
overcomes conventional racial prejudices and learns to respect and love Jim.
The book’s pages are dotted with idyllic descriptions of the great river and the
surrounding forests, and Huck’s good nature and unconscious humour
permeate the whole. But a thread that runs through adventure after adventure
is that of human cruelty, which shows itself both in the acts of individuals and
in their unthinking acceptance of such institutions as slavery. The natural
goodness of Huck is continually contrasted with the effects of a corrupt
society.
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For Huck and Jim, the Mississippi River is the ultimate symbol of freedom. Alone on their raft, they do
not have to answer to anyone. The river carries them toward freedom: for Jim, toward the free states; for
Huck, away from his abusive father and the restrictive “sivilizing” of St. Petersburg. Much like the river
itself, Huck and Jim are in flux, willing to change their attitudes about each other with little prompting.
Despite their freedom, however, they soon find that they are not completely free from the evils and
influences of the towns on the river’s banks. Even early on, the real world intrudes on the paradise of the
raft: the river floods, bringing Huck and Jim into contact with criminals, wrecks, and stolen goods. Then,
a thick fog causes them to miss the mouth of the Ohio River, which was to be their route to freedom.
As the novel progresses, then, the river becomes something other than the inherently benevolent place
Huck originally thought it was. As Huck and Jim move further south, the duke and the dauphin invade the
raft, and Huck and Jim must spend more time ashore. Though the river continues to offer a refuge from
trouble, it often merely effects the exchange of one bad situation for another. Each escape exists in the
larger context of a continual drift southward, toward the Deep South and entrenched slavery. In this
transition from idyllic retreat to source of peril, the river mirrors the complicated state of the South. As
Huck and Jim’s journey progresses, the river, which once seemed a paradise and a source of freedom,
becomes merely a short-term means of escape that nonetheless pushes Huck and Jim ever further toward
danger and destruction.
Mark Twain grew up on the Mississippi River in Hannibal, Missouri, and the Mississippi is
virtually a character in his classic novels The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1876) and The
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1884). Twain's description of the antebellum steamboat era
in Life on the Mississippi (1883), was based on his own experiences.
Novelist Ernest Hemingway famously said, “All modern American literature comes from one book by Mark Twain
called Huckleberry Finn. . . . All American writing comes from that. There was nothing before. There has been nothing
as good since.”During their trip down the Mississippi on a raft, Twain depicts in a satirical and humorous way Huck
and Jim’s encounters with hypocrisy, racism, violence, and other evils of American society. His use in serious
literature of a lively, simple American language full of dialect and colloquial expressions paved the way for many later
writers, including Hemingway and William Faulkner.