The main theme in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn that concerns the duke and Dauphin is _____. friendship and loyalty pretending to be what one is not slavery as a socially accepted institution the duality between what is right and what is legal
Answers
Answer:
The right answer is " Pretending to be the one what one isn't."
Both the Duke and the Dauphin are swindlers/ con men pretending to be other than what they are. Nor they are French, and the "Dauphin" has not the slightest bit resemblance with King Louis XVI. They are claiming to be what they are not so as to trick individuals out of cash.
Answer:
In the novel “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn’, the theme of slavery is perhaps the most well known aspect. Twain was very much anti-slavery and by considering this, he provides an allegory to explain why slavery is wrong and illegal.
Through the character of ‘Jim’, Twain demonstrates the humanity of slaves and the struggles with the path of his life. Twain outrages at the society that made him a slave and also encourages the readers to feel a sense of sympathy and empathy for Jim because freedom is the right of every human being.