They dressed Jim up as a girl
The king and the duke rub lampblack on Jim's face to disguise him as an Indian. They dress him in ragged clothes and tell others that he is a runaway apprentice who is sick with smallpox to avoid suspicion.
Jim is betrayed by Huck, the duke and king; senseless, Jim thought the two rapscallions are really the duke and the king.
Huck's opinion of the king and duke would agree most with the character of Jim. Huck eventually sees through the king and duke's deceitful actions and realizes that they are not to be trusted. Similarly, Jim is initially skeptical of the king and duke's intentions and sees them for who they truly are.
During the night, Huck and Jim were going to proceed ashore to see if Jim was in a free state ultimately gaining his freedom. Before they go ashore they hear shouting, barking or dogs and see torches chasing something. That something was the traveling con men who are later called the Duke and King. Huck and Jim let them come on board because they beg them.
Jim was dressed like this so that Huck, the Duke and the King could sneak into the town without suspicion.
They are tarred and feathered in chapter 33 when Jim tells people it is a scam
Jim crow laws
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.
no he dosent he belives them to be frauds :)
In "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn," the main antagonists are the Duke and the King, who are con artists that Huck and Jim encounter on their journey. Other adversaries include Huck's abusive father and the society that condones slavery and racism.
A King is a more senior position than a Duke.
Elmo in disguise
Not a king, but a Grand Duke. His name is Grand Duke Henri of Luxembourg