I found quite a bit of humor and sarcasm in this reading and it was, so far, one of the most enjoyable ones too. Like when Huck and Jim find the crashed boat Jim says, “…dey’s a watchman on dat wreck.” And Huck replies, “Watchman your grandmother…”
Also, in chapter 12, restating from my first blog, I said Huck decides whether a thing is true or not to him normally by having hard evidence. This time it’s when they are on the raft floating past St. Louis. People have told him there were twenty or thirty-thousand people living there but “ [he] never believed it till [he saw] that wonderful spread of lights at two o’clock that still night.”
Now in chapter 14, we see Huck’s opinion about Jim evolving when he realizes “…he [has] an uncommon level head for a nigger.” And again when he says, “I never seen such a nigger.”
My favorite part has probably got to be when Jim and Huck talk about King Solomon in the bible and Jim isn’t getting the importance of the king saying he’ll split the child in two so both women are happy. His reasons of why he thinks it “[has no sense]” is so innocent because his mind is set and Huck soon realized that “ if [jim’s] got a notion in his head once, there warn’t no getting it out again.”