The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Jim helps Houck develop greater changes. Huckleberry learns multiple lessons such as growing into better and trustworthy friend. Throughout the novel Jim helped Houck see the different side of life and how everyone grows in different surroundings. Eventually both Huckleberry and Jim grew more mature and wanted the best life for one another. Houck finds out a new identity about the world during the book.
During the book, Huckleberry Finn has not experienced what life really was or what you could possibly encounter during times that just come out of anything. Jim is that someone you could call peculiar or unexpected. When Houck and Jim were with each other on the island and going down river together, Houck primarily was giving orders to Jim. The motive why Houck was giving orders was because that was the environment he grown up around. As times moves forward Houck starts to realize how naggers have been treated throughout life and began to respect IM more by who Jim is on the inside.
When Houck was debating on whether to tell Mary that Jim was with him, “It was fifteen minutes before could work myself up to go and humble myself to a Niger; but I done it, and I warrant ever sorry for it afterwards, neither. I didn’t do him no more mean tricks, and I wouldn’t done that one if I’d a endowed it would make him feel that way,” page 89. Houck was mortified of what was going to happen if he told Miss Watson, but he overcame it well.