"I bet I was glad to see him. . ." (page 41)
"Come in Huck, but doan look at his face - it's too gashly. . ." (page 50)
Huck just wants to be able to control his own life. He's tired of other people trying to control it for him (Pap, Widow Douglas, Tom, Miss Watson). What he forgets when he fakes his death and takes off on his own, though, is how lonely that life can be.
In the first quote, from page 41, Huck acknowledges that going it alone is lonesome. He's on Jackson's Island by himself.
The second quote takes place after Huck finds Jim also hiding on the island. They've found an old hut and there is a dead man inside. Jim tries to protect Huck by keeping him from having to see the gruesomeness that is the old man's face.
Both of these quotes fit in with the theme of companionship as salvation in this novel. As much as Huck wants to be able to do live on his own, he is still happy to find Jim and not be by himself anymore. And Jim hasn't been able to hunt for his own food since he doesn't have any weapons. They both end up being beneficial to each other. Through the second quote, we can even see this pseudo father/son relationship emerging. Jim becomes protective of Huck, and Huck begins to listen to Jim's wisdom.
It makes sense that Huck would eventually find himself looking up to Jim, and I believe we will see that more as the novel progresses. Huck has never really had a male figure in his life to look up to. His own father beat him regularly and only used him for the money he earned by catching the robbers. And Jim has never been looked up to by anyone. As a slave, he was considered property, not a human being. Jim and Huck's relationship is growing into something beautiful; something that highlights the flaws in a society that disregards people who don't look like society thinks they should. Mark Twain uses these themes to make a statement about humanity and how even the most unlikely of people can become friends.
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