Brian,

I guess I'm wearing down in my certainty about the Vera & VN remarks about Huck Finn. Possibly, as Jansey has suggested, I somewhere picked up the Tom Sawyer anecdote Ole Nyegaard mentioned yesterday and confused it.

But I'm not sure I can agree with Mr. Booth. It has to be asked, is the treatment of Jim really any worse, qualitatively, than the treatment of the white Southerners, most of whom are stupidly violent (the Grangerford/Shepherdson feud), wholly corrupt and conniving (the Duke and the Dauphin), and/or chronically dim-witted? Aside from the daughters that the duke and dauphin conspire to rob, one or two of their family friends, and Huck himself (who is prone to cruel practical jokes, and an almost pathological liar), their isn't a white person in the book who is as civilized, compassionate, and intelligent as Jim.

He may be the victim of darkie jokes, but his responses are always sensible, and the people playing the jokes are clearly his inferiors.

The last third of HF is certainly a mess. But, to me, Jim comes off as by far the most sane and least ludicrous of the characters. Tom Sawyer is not the vivid character he was in his own book, and is just a device for Clemens to illustrate his own disgust with the romantic chivalric ideas Clemens believed had done the South enormous harm.

This was a recurring theme with Clemens. In "Life on the Mississippi" he describes the novels of Sir Walter Scott as a ruinous influence. Not fair to Scott, and I think he meant more to blame the South for its susceptibility to nonsensical Quixote-like ideas of romance. In a later, and quite mediocre novel "A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court" Clemen's returned to, and dealt at length with the ideas that corrupt the last part of HF.

Andrew Brown




ANDREW BROWN
ACD: Copy
Chrysler Integrated Marketing
248.293.4391
BBDO DETROIT

  

This message and any attachments contain information, which may be confidential or privileged. If you are not the intended recipient, please refrain from any disclosure, copying, distribution or use of this information. Please be aware that such actions are prohibited. If you have received this transmission in error, kindly notify us by calling 1-800-262-4723 or e-mail to helpdesk@bbdo.com. We appreciate your cooperation.