A take away I got from these chapters is that Huck is very innocent and trusting. I feel as if he has a different outlook than the people who raised him and especially than his father. This may be due to his young age but still. And also he has an oddly large amount of trust in Jim, which doesn't seem like a great idea considering he is an escaped slave. And on the topic of Huck's dad, Huck's dad is saying that he doesn't want to be in the world when a free black man can vote. He says that the government is not helping out our country when allow this to happen. It's weird to think about racist people and how they were back then. Furthermore, how they did not even think of an African American man as human. We as the white community or society really put them down. Not to mention it's repulsive to think that Pap thought they shouldn't even be allowed those rights.
One thing I like about this part in the book is that Huck is starting out on his own and making a new life for himself away from his father. He can finally get away from the rules he dislikes, to do as he pleases and to forge his own path. He doesn't have to live under his fathers influence anymore either, which I do believe is going to benefit Huck in the long run.