How does huck escape his father
The farther south they go, the harder it will be for Jim to avoid recapture. When actual shooting breaks out between the two feuding clans, Huck climbs into a cottonwood tree to hide. He stays hidden during the shootout that kills his friend Buck and waits until after dark to come down.
Then Huck runs to the river, where Jim has been hiding on an island in the swamp. The duke prints a handbill identifying Jim as a runaway slave and then shows the handbill to make others believe they have captured the runaway.
This ruse allows the raft to travel during the day. Later the duke dresses Jim up as King Lear. Although they know the duke and king are frauds, Huck and Jim benefit from the money their scams bring in. Mary Jane entrusts the duke and king with a bag of money.
He also tells Mary Jane about the Royal Nonesuch scam and advises her on how to expose the men. Huck writes Mary Jane a note to tell her where the money is hidden. He plotted to sell Jim from the beginning, when he printed up the handbill identifying Jim as a runaway slave.
To collect his money, all the duke has to do is show the handbill and tell someone where Jim is hiding. Huck arrives at the Phelps plantation shortly after Jim and is immediately mistaken for Tom Sawyer.
When Tom Sawyer arrives, he claims to be Sid Sawyer. Since he is at the Phelps plantation, Jim hears the news that Miss Watson has died and freed him in her will. Ace your assignments with our guide to The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn! Every action Huck performs, from placing blood on an axe to dragging a bag full of meal, is practical and works to help his plan. The escape is efficient, and although Huck wishes Tom were there to "throw in the fancy touches," readers realize that Tom's additions would create more problems than solutions.
Huck's practicality is evident not only in his narrative reaction to events but also in his physical actions. The self-reliant characteristic aids Huck well in the future, as he faces decisions that require individual thought and rejection of accepted beliefs. Previous Chapters Next Chapter 8. Huck sells his fortune the money he and Tom recovered in Tom Sawyer , which the Judge has been managing for him to the befuddled Judge for a dollar. Jim says that the hairball needs money to talk, so Huck gives Jim a counterfeit quarter.
It is uncertain which angel will win out, but Huck is safe for now. He will have much happiness and sorrow in his life, he will marry a poor woman and then a rich woman, and he should stay clear of the water, since that is where he will die.
That night, Huck finds Pap waiting for him in his bedroom. Pap is a frightening sight. Pap asks if Huck is really as rich as he has heard and calls his son a liar when Huck replies that he has no more money. Pap then takes the dollar that Huck got from Judge Thatcher and leaves to buy whiskey. The Judge and Widow Douglas try to get custody of Huck but give up after the new judge in town refuses to separate a father and son. Pap eventually lands in jail after a drunken spree.
The new judge takes Pap into his home and tries to reform him, but the judge and his wife prove to be very weepy and moralizing. Pap tearfully repents his ways but soon gets drunk again, and the new judge decides that the only way to reform Pap is with a shotgun. Huck continues to attend, partly to spite his father. Pap goes on one drunken binge after another.
One day, he kidnaps Huck, takes him deep into the woods to a secluded cabin on the Illinois shore, and locks Huck inside all day while he rambles outside.
Eventually, Huck finds an old saw, makes a hole in the wall, and resolves to escape from both Pap and the Widow Douglas, but Pap returns as Huck is about to break free. He has heard that his chances of getting the money are good but that he will probably lose the fight for custody of Huck. Pap continues to rant about a mixed-race man in town; Pap is disgusted that the man is allowed to vote in his home state of Ohio, and that legally he cannot be sold into slavery until he has been in Missouri six months.
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