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When the fog finally thinned, he spotted the raft drifting ahead. He snuck aboard and found Jim asleep, exhausted from mourning Huck, whom he thought had drowned. Huck, being a boy, decided to play a trick. He woke Jim and tried to convince him the entire fog and their separation had been nothing but a dream.

The most powerful symbol in Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is the . It represents freedom and a literal escape from the "civilized" world, which Huck finds hypocritical and cruel.

In that moment, the —usually a tiny island of peace and equality—became a courtroom. Huck looked at Jim, not as property or a "slave," but as a man whose heart he had broken. Outside, on the shore, the towns represented a society that said Jim was a piece of metal to be sold. But here, on the water, the truth was different.

To see how these symbols work together, here is a story illustrating a pivotal moment in the book:

Examples Of Symbolism In Huck Finn