Mark Twain, the father of North American literature, portrayed several vivid characters i n his great novel The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by adapting original colloquial language. Reading through the book, what d...Mark Twain, the father of North American literature, portrayed several vivid characters i n his great novel The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by adapting original colloquial language. Reading through the book, what delights the reader first, last and most is its language, the language of the characters, which makes the reader believe that the whole story is not told by Mark Twain but by Huck Finn, who seems to be a young boy of twelve or thirteen. In shaping this boy as well as others, the author adapts many artistic techniques and the adaptation shows much of his mastery ofwriting,.展开更多
文摘Mark Twain, the father of North American literature, portrayed several vivid characters i n his great novel The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by adapting original colloquial language. Reading through the book, what delights the reader first, last and most is its language, the language of the characters, which makes the reader believe that the whole story is not told by Mark Twain but by Huck Finn, who seems to be a young boy of twelve or thirteen. In shaping this boy as well as others, the author adapts many artistic techniques and the adaptation shows much of his mastery ofwriting,.