The correct answer is C, hypocrisy. This work of Mark Twain's is actually a fictionalized version of his own wartime experiences. He is trying to tell us that there is nothing glorious about war, that there is only death and suffering. It cannot be glorious when you have to kill somebody, or somebody will kill you. That's the irony and hypocrisy that Twain was trying to convey in this work.
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<em><u>1)"the regard that something is held to deserve; the importance, worth, or usefulness of something."</u></em>
<em><u>2)"a person's principles or standards of behavior; one's judgment of what is important in life."</u></em>
<em>BASED ON THIS DEFINITION I CAN DETERMINE THAT</em> YOUR ANSWER IS A THE MEASURES USED TO DETERMINE HOW GOOD A PERSON IS.
The correct answer is <span>The author, Mark Twain, writes about himself as if he is another character in the story.
In the beginning, it seems as if Huck is talking instead of Mark Twain, because Huck is talking about Twain and the book Tom Sawyer and says that Twain lied and that he will tell a story that is more truthful for understanding characters who are in the book.</span>