Chapter 4: "Jim had a hair-ball as big as your fist, which had been took out of the fourth stomach of an ox. ... He said it knowed everything. What I wanted to know was, what [Pap] was going to do, and was he going to stay?" (text shortened)
Huck has Jim consult a hairball oracle to learn about Pap's whereabouts and well-being. The oracle gives Jim guidance and advice on how to handle Pap's return.
Jim told huck about the dead man they saw in the river...
Jim told Huck that the dead man they saw in the house floating in the river was his pap. <:
In the very last part of "Huckleberry Finn," Jim tells Huck that his father, Pap Finn, has died a few days ago in the floating house. He also shares that Tom Sawyer has been shot in the leg while escaping Jim Turner's gang, but is expected to recover.
Pap tries to kill Huck because he is angry that Huck has money and refuses to give it to him. Pap feels entitled to use Huck's money for alcohol and believes that Huck owes it to him. This demonstrates Pap's selfish and abusive nature towards Huck.
Jim and Huck find the house to be a mess, and find whiskey, playing cards, and obscene graffiti (symbolizing human vices). Most importantly, they find the body of Huck's murdered father, who was shot in the back. Jim makes sure Huck doesn't see his face, so Huck doesn't know that his father was killed.
Pap wanted to find Huck because he was after his money. Pap viewed Huck as his property and wanted to control him for personal gain.
Huck recognizes the tracks of Pap, his abusive father, in the snow. Huck is frightened after seeing them because he knows that Pap is a dangerous and unpredictable person.
Pap was trying to kill Huck because he wanted access to Huck's money, which was being held in a trust and couldn't be accessed by Pap. He saw Huck as a means to get his hands on the money and believed that by getting rid of Huck, he could access it.
When Huck got rich, Pap Finn came back to get some of his money. He wanted to get Huck's money. A+
Huck's father, Pap, did not want him to go to school because he believed education was not necessary and that it would not be beneficial to Huck's future. Pap preferred Huck to follow in his footsteps and live a rough, uneducated life like him.
Jim is one of the main characters in the book, to not have him in it would make the book boring, just to have huck running around from aunt polly would be interesting but it would not be the same. The dead man in the book in the floating house is later revealed as pap.
No, Pap does not get Huck's $6,000 in "Huckleberry Finn." Huck hides the money and eventually discovers that Pap has been killed. Huck then makes a plan to protect the money for his future.
Pap yells at Huck because since he has become civilized he thinks that Huck is now better than him so then he becomes angry
Huck's pap was an abusive drunkard who neglected and mistreated Huck. He kidnapped Huck and locked him up in a cabin, aiming to extort money from him. Huck eventually fakes his own death to escape from his abusive father.