The duke and king pretended to be the long-lost brothers of the Wilks family and claimed inheritance rights to their fortune. They convinced the townspeople of their identity through deception and manipulation, ultimately swindling the Wilks family out of their money.
The duke and the king impersonate relatives of Peter Wilks to deceive the townspeople and claim Peter Wilks' inheritance for themselves. They hope to capitalize on the townspeople's sympathy towards the Wilks family to manipulate the situation in their favor and make off with the money.
Huck hides the Wilks family's treasure in the coffin of Peter Wilks before it is buried to keep it safe from the King and the Duke.
The Wilks Brothers plan to steal the money left in the will.
Wilks family is the target of one of the duke and the king's most conniving scams. The two cons learn from a young man that Peter Wilkes has just passed away. Peter Wilks's niecesâ??Mary Jane, Susan, and Joanna are about to inherit the family estate, since their mom and dad passed away the year before.
Huck hides the Wilks girls' inheritance in the coffins of their deceased relatives, Peter Wilks and his brothers. He places the money in Peter Wilks's coffin, hoping it will be safe there.
Huck hid the money in Peter Wilks' coffin to keep it safe from the Duke and the King.
from a guy , that his dad died and left money and land and he never meet his brothers so they pretend to be them to get the money.
In "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" by Mark Twain, the king and duke hide the money by sewing it into the lining of an old straw mattress. They then put the mattress in the hayloft of the Wilks family's house.
The king and duke hid the money in the coffin of Peter Wilks which they stole and filled with lead before burying it. They believed this was a secure hiding spot as no one would suspect a coffin to contain anything other than a body.
In "Adventures of Huckleberry Finn", the King impersonates Peter Wilks, a deceased Englishman, while the Duke impersonates Reverend Harvey Wilks, Peter Wilks's long-lost brother. They attempt to fraudulently claim Peter Wilks's inheritance by deceiving the townspeople.
The king learns about the Wilks family through a conversation with a trusted advisor, a report from a spy, or by receiving official documents detailing their background and status. This information is then presented to the king for review and consideration.
They justify it by saying its helping the Wilks sisters