Do You Think That the Duke and the King Will Play a Continuing Role in the Novel

The kind of people Huck and Tom might turn into were they to only act out of self-interest, the duke and king are a couple of con men that Huck and Jim travel with. The two are selfish, greedy, deceptive, and debauched, but sometimes their actions expose and exploit societal hypocrisy in a way that is somewhat attractive and also rather revealing. Though the exploits of the duke and king can be farcical and fun to watch, the two demonstrate an absolute, hideous lack of respect for human life and dignity.

The duke and king Quotes in Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn quotes below are all either spoken by The duke and king or refer to The duke and king. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:

Slavery and Racism Theme Icon

).

"I doan' mine one er two kings, but dat's enough. Dis one's powerful drunk, en de duke ain' much better."

Page Number: 101

Explanation and Analysis:

I was sorry for them poor pitiful rascals, it seems like I couldn't ever feel any hardness against them any more in the world. It was a dreadful thing to see. Human beings can be awful cruel to one another.

Page Number: 174

Explanation and Analysis:

The duke and king Character Timeline in Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

The timeline below shows where the character The duke and king appears in Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.

Society and Hypocrisy Theme Icon

...to con people, having once been "so high." He claims to have been born the Duke of Bridgewater. Huck and Jim pity the man after he begins to cry, and the... (full context)

Society and Hypocrisy Theme Icon

Growing Up Theme Icon

The duke becomes sour, but the king tells him that he should cheer up. Life on the... (full context)

Society and Hypocrisy Theme Icon

The duke and king ask Huck and Jim if Jim is a runaway slave. Huck says that... (full context)

Freedom Theme Icon

The next morning, the duke and king scheme as to how to make some easy money. They decide to put... (full context)

Society and Hypocrisy Theme Icon

Religion and Superstition Theme Icon

With Jim still on the raft and the duke at the printing office, Huck and the king go to the meeting in the woods... (full context)

Society and Hypocrisy Theme Icon

Freedom Theme Icon

Meanwhile, the duke is in town at the printing office, selling bills and advertisements in, and subscriptions to,... (full context)

Society and Hypocrisy Theme Icon

...as the lookout, Jim asks Huck if he expects them to run into any more kings on their journeys. Huck says he doesn't, much to Jim's relief. Jim says that two... (full context)

Slavery and Racism Theme Icon

Society and Hypocrisy Theme Icon

The duke and king continue to practice Shakespeare. After a few days, the group arrives at a... (full context)

Society and Hypocrisy Theme Icon

That night, the duke and king put on their performance of Shakespeare in town, but only twelve people show... (full context)

Society and Hypocrisy Theme Icon

All day the duke and king prepare for their performance of "The Royal Nonesuch," rigging up a stage with... (full context)

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After that, the duke thanks the audience members and asks them to spread the word about the show. The... (full context)

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The next day, the duke and king play to a full house and scam them in the same way as... (full context)

Society and Hypocrisy Theme Icon

Back at the raft, Huck and the duke meet up with Jim and the king, who didn't even go to town for the... (full context)

Huck knows that the duke and king are really just con men, but he doesn't think it would do any... (full context)

Freedom Theme Icon

As the duke and king devise another con, Jim tells the duke that it is uncomfortable to be... (full context)

Society and Hypocrisy Theme Icon

The king, dressed in black clothes that make him look "swell and starchy," rafts to a nearby... (full context)

Society and Hypocrisy Theme Icon

On the raft, the boy tells the king that he resembles Mr. Wilks. The king lies and says that he is a reverend,... (full context)

Society and Hypocrisy Theme Icon

Growing Up Theme Icon

After dropping the boy off, the king tells Huck to fetch the duke. Huck knows what the king is up to (conning... (full context)

Society and Hypocrisy Theme Icon

Growing Up Theme Icon

The duke and king, pretending to be Harvey and William Wilks, are received by Peter Wilks's family,... (full context)

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The king addresses the crowd, saying how hard it was to lose Peter and how grateful he... (full context)

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Mary Jane fetches the letter her uncle left behind, and the king reads it and cries. In the letter, Peter Wilks bequeaths to his nieces his house... (full context)

Society and Hypocrisy Theme Icon

The duke and king, along with Huck, go to the cellar and find the hidden bag full... (full context)

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Upstairs before the townspeople, the duke and king announce that they are giving what Peter seemingly bequeathed them to his nieces,... (full context)

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A man, Doctor Robinson, laughs in the king's face after he gives his etymology of "orgies." The townspeople are shocked, but the undeterred... (full context)

Society and Hypocrisy Theme Icon

The duke and king and Huck are all given rooms in the Wilks home to sleep in.... (full context)

Growing Up Theme Icon

Freedom Theme Icon

Huck searches the king's room for the money but doesn't find it. Just then the duke and king enter... (full context)

Slavery and Racism Theme Icon

As they leave the room, the duke tells the king that they should hide the money in another place, because otherwise some... (full context)

Society and Hypocrisy Theme Icon

Growing Up Theme Icon

After the king "got off some of his usual rubbage" by giving another speech, the undertaker seals the... (full context)

Slavery and Racism Theme Icon

Growing Up Theme Icon

In selling the Wilks's family of slaves, the king separates a mother from her children. The Wilks girls are distraught at this, and, if... (full context)

Slavery and Racism Theme Icon

Later, the duke and king also question Huck about whether he's been in their room. Huck lies and... (full context)

Slavery and Racism Theme Icon

Growing Up Theme Icon

Huck comes upon Mary Jane, who is packing for her trip to England. She is also crying because, in selling the Wilks's slaves,... (full context)

Growing Up Theme Icon

Huck reveals that the duke and king are not Mary Jane's uncles but rather a couple of frauds. Mary Jane... (full context)

Society and Hypocrisy Theme Icon

Freedom Theme Icon

...away, because he is afraid that she will express in her face knowledge of the duke and king's fraud, which will in turn allow the two to escape. Mary Jane is... (full context)

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Growing Up Theme Icon

...of his story, he at last tricks the two into not mentioning anything to the duke and king that might alert them to Mary Jane's knowledge of their fraudulence. (full context)

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Later that day, the duke and king hold an auction to sell off the Wilks estate. As the auction draws... (full context)

Society and Hypocrisy Theme Icon

Growing Up Theme Icon

...the arrival of the two men who claim to be Harvey and William Wilks, the duke and king persist in their fraudulence. After the king cracks a joke at the real... (full context)

Society and Hypocrisy Theme Icon

Growing Up Theme Icon

At the tavern, Doctor Robinson asks the king to produce the bag of gold so that it can be kept safely till the... (full context)

Society and Hypocrisy Theme Icon

Levi Bell begins to speak with the king, and eventually tricks him, the duke, and the other old man claiming to be Harvey... (full context)

Society and Hypocrisy Theme Icon

The real Harvey Wilks asks the king to reveal what is tattooed onto Peter Wilks's chest. Whitening, the king at last says... (full context)

Society and Hypocrisy Theme Icon

Freedom Theme Icon

...Suddenly, though, Huck hears a familiar sound, the humming of a skiff. It is the duke and king. Huck sinks to the floor of the raft and almost cries that the... (full context)

Freedom Theme Icon

After the duke and king board the raft, the king shakes Huck by the collar and asks if... (full context)

Society and Hypocrisy Theme Icon

Freedom Theme Icon

The king cusses the town and everybody in it, but the duke turns on him again and... (full context)

...is the very reference to the bag of gold that triggers an argument between the duke and king over how the money got into Peter's coffin in the first place, each... (full context)

Growing Up Theme Icon

Freedom Theme Icon

Huck, Jim, and the con men drift downriver for four days, at which point the duke and king feel safe enough to resume their scams in nearby villages, but they don't... (full context)

Slavery and Racism Theme Icon

Freedom Theme Icon

The king goes up to a village to see if the people there have caught wind of... (full context)

Slavery and Racism Theme Icon

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...been captured and taken to Silas Phelps' farm. Huck also learns that it was the king who turned Jim in for forty dollars, using a handbill earlier printed by the duke. (full context)

Slavery and Racism Theme Icon

Society and Hypocrisy Theme Icon

As Huck makes his way to save Jim, he runs into the duke. Over the course of their conversation, the duke tells Huck that the king did indeed... (full context)

Society and Hypocrisy Theme Icon

Freedom Theme Icon

...and another man, the show is scandalous. Huck, realizing that the show must be the duke and king's, sneaks out of the house at night with Tom to warn the con... (full context)

...Tom walk back to the farm, Huck feels humble and somehow to blame for the duke and king's fate, even though he knows he didn't do anything. Huck supposes that, when... (full context)

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Source: https://www.litcharts.com/lit/the-adventures-of-huckleberry-finn/characters/the-duke-and-king

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