To get all the money out of him; Pap didn't care about Huck he just wanted all the money to get drunk off of.
Pap Finn.
In "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn," Pap is Huck Finn's abusive and alcoholic father. He is opposed to education and civil rights, and his presence drives Huck to run away and seek freedom. Huck's relationship with Pap serves as a major source of conflict and character development in the novel.
Pap's cabin in "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" is located deep in the woods along the Mississippi River. It is described as a secluded and rundown shack where Pap Finn lives in isolation.
After Huck faked his own death.
The town drunk in "Huckleberry Finn" is known as Boggs. He is a recurring character in the story who is often seen stumbling around in a drunken state and causing trouble. Boggs meets a tragic end when he is shot by Colonel Sherburn in a dispute.
In "Adventures of Huckleberry Finn," Huck's father is named Pap Finn. Pap Finn is depicted as an abusive and alcoholic character who resurfaces in Huck's life causing trouble for him. Huck goes to great lengths to escape from his father's oppressive and harmful influence.
He is abusive drunk who uses Huck for money and booze.
Judge Thatcher and the Widow Douglas
"sympathetic" or "lenient" would least describe the attitude of the new judge toward Pap in Huckleberry Finn, as the judge is portrayed as strict and unsympathetic towards Pap's actions and behavior.
No, He gives it to Judge Thatcher so that his father can't get it.
The Widow, or Miss Watson. She is refeered to as both.
Jim was a better father figure than Pap.