Style analysis of Huck Finn
In this passage in "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn," Mark Twain's style incorporates tone, diction, and detail; he uses these techniques to create an image and convey a message to the reader. These elements are used to contrast life on the shore with life on the river. The tone of this passage is both scary and peaceful. In the beginning of the passage when Huck is on the shore, the tone that he gives off is a scared one. The passage starts with Huck hiding in a tree, "he wished he was out of the tree," but he "dasn't" come down; this shows that Huck is scared. When Huck heard the "bang!" from the three or four guns and when he heard the men shout "kill them," it made him "so sick" that he almost "fell out of the tree." Huck was terrified of these men, he wished he "hadn't ever come ashore that night to see such things," this image was stuck in his head he was not "ever going to get shut of them." Towards the end of the passage when Huck is on the river, the tone is a peaceful one. The "two or t
Since Huck is scared-he is trying to be careful-so he "crept along down the river-bank. The detail used in this passage creates both olfactory and visual imagery for the reader. The use of diction, by Mark Twain, in this passage connotes different meanings; at first Huck is scared, and then he is at peace. " When Huck saw two bodies "laying in the edge of the water" it created a scary and grotesque image for the reader, the reader can now create an image of what Huck is going through. When Buck heard Huck's voice, he was "awful" surprised and informed Huck to "watch out sharp" for any sign of the gunmen The choice of words used by Twain shows the urgency to get away from the men. " There are definite changes in tone, and by the use of diction, Mark Twain shows the reader how it has changed. As you can see in this passage in "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn," Mark Twain's style incorporates tone, diction, and detail. The tone in the passage starts as a scared one but then changes to a calm and peaceful one once Huck is on the river. At one point in the passage, Huck is scared to the point that he gets "sick" by just thinking about the men, and then later on he "slid into the river and had a swim. Then the river is described as "softened" and was "perfectly still," this shows the reader how the tone in the passage has changed to a tranquil one. The diction connotes the different meanings of the tone; the tone is changed halfway through the passage. The "bang!" of the guns allows the reader to imagine what the shots fired would sound like. The contrast in diction between Huck's life on the shore and his life on the river show the changes in tone from scared and nervous to calm and relaxed. The details also show how Huck is calm by describing the weather and Huck's surroundings.
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