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on a farm with a large family
No, Jim does not get married in "My Antonia." The novel focuses on Jim's relationship with the title character, Antonia, but they do not end up getting married.
Lena told him to.
At the end of "My Antonia" by Willa Cather, Jim reflects on his memories of Antonia and their shared past. He realizes the impact she had on his life and the lasting impression she left on him. The novel ends with Jim remembering Antonia with fondness and nostalgia.
Lena told him he needed to. Apex/
Antonia was living on a farm in Nebraska when Jim saw her again at the novel's end. She had married and had children, and seemed happy with her life.
Lena told him he needed to. Apex/
Lena told him he needed to.
In the novel "Adventures of Huckleberry Finn," Jim is freed from slavery after it is revealed that Miss Watson had already freed him in her will. Huck discovers Jim's freedom and helps him reunite with his family in the end.
Jim went to see Ántonia at the end of the novel to fulfill a promise he made to her long ago when they were young. He wanted to reconnect with her and revisit their shared past before parting ways for good.
I assume you are talking about the Mark twain novel Huckleberry Finn. Jim, called by a racial name in the original, is a fugitive slave. In one film variant he is an American Indian, who may be fleeing the Police or Cavalry.
Yes, towards the end of the novel, it's revealed that the widow who had been looking after Jim's family after they were freed planned to reunite them in the free states.