He told Uncle Silas that Sid left to find out what happened at the farm.
Jim told Huck and Tom that Uncle Silas was dead because they overheard their conversation about Silas being sick and feared the worst.
She came in to see if he was comfortable or needed anything!
they stoped up the rat holes in the cellar.
he came in everyday to pray with him
she came in to see if he was comfortable or needed anything
Jim serves as a key companion and confidant to Huck during their adventures at Aunt Sally and Uncle Silas's farm. He helps Huck navigate the challenges they face and provides support and guidance as they work together to outsmart their adversaries and ultimately escape. Jim's loyalty and wisdom enable him to protect Huck and contribute to their success in the face of danger.
Uncle Silas decided to sell Huck to a plantation down the river for $40 in the book "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn."
Jim is treated harshly by Uncle Silas and is locked up in a small, dark room in the attic. He is given meager food and water, and is subjected to physical abuse and threats in an attempt to make him comply with Uncle Silas's demands.
Silas Phelps was the uncle of Tom Sawyer, who Huck encountered when he impersonated Tom while trying to rescue Jim from slavery. Huck had only spent a few hours with the Phelps' when Tom Sawyer showed up and pretended to be his brother Sid. Tom and Huck then spent awhile with the Phelps' creating an elaborate, yet pointless plan to rescue Jim. Under Tom's guidance, they created a much more complicated plan to rescue Jim, when they really only needed to climb through a window to rescue him.
He would advertise jim in some newspaper
In "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn," the character who sells out Jim, the runaway slave, is Silas Phelps. Jim is captured on the Phelps' farm while he is waiting for Huck to come back for him.
The young boy warns Huck that people are looking for Jim because he has run away. He tells Huck that Jim is suspected of murdering Huck.
Respectful. Uncle Silas and Aunt Sally mistreated Jim by enslaving him and treating him as inferior, which is inhumane and disrespectful.
5'1
He told Huck that Jim had been sold as a runaway slave!!!
In "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn," the appearance of Huck's abusive father, Pap, forces Huck to stage his own death and escape down the Mississippi River with the runaway slave, Jim. This event sets the escape in motion as Huck seeks to avoid his father's abuse and Jim tries to reach freedom.
The character who used a hair ball from an ox to tell Huck's future in "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" is Jim, the enslaved man who accompanies Huck on his journey down the Mississippi River. Jim uses the hair ball to supposedly divine information about Huck's fate and future adventures.