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Comparing Mark Twain's The Adventures Of Huckleberry Finn And Tom Sawyer

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Comparing Mark Twain's The Adventures Of Huckleberry Finn And Tom Sawyer
Huckleberry Finn and Tom Sawyer's friendship is an odd one. Readers first see them as two boys who get into hilarious scrapes. If they dig deeper, they see the boys conflict in their ideas and as Christopher Morris puts it "Huck is usually overpowered by Tom... [and] Tom succeeds because Huck does not want to be excluded" (240 & 241). Huck shows this when the boys join their friends in a raid of a fictional Arab camp in the beginning of the novel. He does not want to miss out on something exciting, but he has his doubts saying, "I didn't believe we could lick a crowd of Spaniards, but I wanted to see the camels and elephants." Huck realizes that Tom has improvised the whole raid "I reckoned he believed in the Arabs and the elephants but as

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