Analysis
In Chapter 3, the practical Huck again struggles to understand religion. When Miss Watson tells Huck he can receive anything he wants through prayer, the literal Huck believes he can receive fishing gear. He contemplates the concept of prayer and wonders why, if someone can get anything, he cannot get any fish-hooks, the widow cannot reclaim her stolen silver snuff-box, and Miss Watson cannot “fat up”? The humorous moment is another example of Huck’s literal approach to his surroundings. Because Huck takes everything at face value, he cannot understand the concept of prayer or “spiritual gifts.” He does not reject religion, but his literal mindset has difficulty with beliefs that, on the surface, appear to be impractical or untrue.
More important, Huck’s struggle compares and contrasts the religions of the Widow Douglas and Miss Watson as he begins to see that religion is practiced differently by his guardians. Through Huck, Twain is exploring his own reservations about religion and its ties to the institution of slavery. It is not incidental that it is Miss Watson who owns Jim and not the Widow Douglas, and Huck continues to question religion and the rules of his society. Huck eventually decides that there are two kinds of Providence, and he would like to avoid Miss Watson’s and go to the one the Widow Douglas describes.
Chapter 3 continues to establish Tom and Huck as contrasting characters. Whereas Huck takes a literal approach to everything he sees and hears, Tom’s knowledge comes solely from the books he reads. At the same time Huck questions religion, he begins to see Tom’s “magicians and A-rabs” as fabrication. For Huck, Tom’s imagination has the same quality as Miss Watson’s religion, and he distrusts the superficial nature of both. This approach serves Huck well throughout the novel. Although he does not completely understand prayer, he does understand the widow’s explanation that he “must help other people . . . and look out for them all the time, and never think about myself.” By applying his own conscience and beliefs, Huck grows as a character and is able to form his own opinions and not blindly accept society’s values and the status quo.
Glossary
hived robbed.
pow-wow to confer, to have an intense discussion; originally from a North American Indian word.
“sumter” mule sumpter mule, a packhorse, mule, or other animal used for carrying baggage.
lay in ambuscade hide in ambush.
slick up to polish.
tract a propagandizing pamphlet, especially one on a religious or political subject.
sap-head a fool.