The Adventures Of Huckleberry Finn: Superstition
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In the novel The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain,  there is a lot of superstition.  Some examples of superstition in the  novel are Huck killing a spider which is bad luck,  the hair-ball used  to tell fortunes, and the rattle-snake skin Huck touches that brings  Huck and Jim good and ....          
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....  you'd  killed a spider."(Twain 5).
In chapter four Huck sees Pap's footprints in the snow.  So  Huck goes to Jim to ask him why Pap is here.  Jim gets a hair-ball  that is the size of a fist that he took from an ox's stomach.  Jim  asks the hair-ball; Why is Pap here?  But the hair-ball won't answer.   Jim says it needs money, so Huck gives Jim a counterfeit quarter.   Jim puts the quarter under the hair-ball.  The hair-ball talks to Jim  and Jim tells Huck that it says.  "Yo'ole father doan' ....          
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 Page count: 3 (approximately 250 words per page)