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by mark twain chapter 22 well, that night we had our show, but there wa…

Question

by mark twain
chapter 22
well, that night we had our show, but there warnt only about twelve people there--just enough to pay expenses. and they laughed all the time, and that made the duke mad; and everybody left, anyway, before the show was over, but one boy which was asleep. so the duke said these arkansaw lunkheads couldnt come up to shakespeare, what they wanted was low comedy--and maybe something ruther worse than low comedy, he reckoned. he said he could size their style. so next morning he got some big sheets of wrapping paper and some black paint, and drawed off some handbills, and stuck them up all over the village. the bills said:
at the court house!
for 3 nights only!
the world - renowned tragedians
david garrick the younger!
and edmund kean the elder!
of the london and continental theatres,
in their thrilling tragedy of
the kings cameleopard,
or
the royal nonesuch!!!
admission 50 cents.
\why dont it, huck?\
\well, it dont, because its in the breed. i reckon theyre all alike.\
what does the dialogue between huck and jim reveal about hucks beliefs?
huck believes that all people of royal stature are clever.
huck believes that many people cannot be totally trusted.
huck believes that only common people have any worth.
huck believes that no one is able to be completely

Explanation:

Brief Explanations

The dialogue references "the breed" being "all alike" in the context of the duke (posing as royalty) and his deceptive, low tactics. Huck's agreement shows he views those claiming royal status as untrustworthy, aligning with the idea that many people (especially those in this deceptive "breed") cannot be fully trusted. The other options are incorrect: Huck does not think royals are clever, he does not value only common people, and the dialogue does not focus on completeness of ability.

Answer:

Huck believes that many people cannot be totally trusted.