After being separated by a fog, Huck wakes up and sees Jim sleeping on the raft. He ties the canoe back to the raft and lays at Jim's feet, pretending to be sleeping. When Jim wakes, Huck pretends that Jim dreamt the whole fog incident. When Jim finds out Huck is pranking him, he is offended. He says that after all the work of trying to find Huck and calling for him, he didn't care about himself or the raft, only about Huck's safety. When he woke up and saw Huck alive, he was so happy he could have kissed Huck's feet. All that time all Huck cared about was making Jim look like a fool. After Jim says this, Huck sees how mean his prank was and feels so bad he could have "kissed his foot to get him to take it back." He apologizes to Jim.
In Mark Twain's "Adventures of Huckleberry Finn," Tom and Huck played a few tricks on Jim. They pretended Huck was dead and then revealed it was just a joke, and they also played a trick on Jim involving a snake. However, they later felt guilty about these pranks.
It is not the dead snake, it is the incident with the fog Huck leaves and tricks Jim saying that he has not left he has been on the raft the whole time.
The trick that Huck plays on Jim is that he pretends that when he left it was all a dream of Jim and it never really happened.
Huck makes Jim believe that he dreamed everything that happened with them when they got separated and their raft was in bad shape.
Huck places a dead rattlesnake at the foot of Jims bed.
Huck pretended that Jim dreamt the whole thing up, when Jim and Huck got separated on the river.
Huck puts the dead snake in Jim's bed hoping that it would scare him.
-advice giver
Huck and Tom first used an old case-knife to dig Jim out of the shed.
No, Tom did not reveal to Huck that the man in the floating house was his father. Huck recognized his father, but he did not tell Tom about it.
In Mark Twain's novel "Adventures of Huckleberry Finn," the characters Jim and Huck use a hair ball from an ox, which they refer to as a "golden hair-ball," to pretend to predict the future. Jim claims to have supernatural abilities and tricks Huck into believing in the hair ball's powers.
Huck goes along with Tom's Plans, even though they are unrealistic and waste Jim's time.
Forty dollars
Tom and Huck steal Jim, a runaway slave, for the Phelps in Mark Twain's novel "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn." They do so to help Jim escape from his captivity and reunite him with his family.
Huck is surprised because Tom is higher in society. Huck cannot comprehend that a well educated and well brought up boy would "risk it all" by stealing Jim. Little does Huck realize that Tom is not helping Huck to break Jim out of the shed that he was held in, Tom is helping them for the adventure. That is why he adds ridiculous steps in the plot to break Jim out
In chapters 40-43 of "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn," Huck encounters the Phelps family who mistake him for their nephew, Tom Sawyer. Huck goes along with the mistake and finds out that Jim is being held captive. Huck comes up with a plan to rescue Jim with the help of Tom and ultimately succeeds in setting Jim free.
Huck expects Tom to be excited and supportive of his plan to free Jim, as he believes Tom shares his desire to help their friend escape slavery. Huck anticipates that Tom will be eager to help carry out the plan and will find the adventure appealing.
:) the dogs recognized huck and tom and kept heading toward the river (:
Jim and Huck decided to bring a doctor to help Tom. They knew that Tom needed medical attention for his wounds, so they traveled to the nearest doctor's house to seek help for Tom.
The Phelps mistake Huck for Tom Sawyer, which leads to confusion and mistaken identity throughout their interactions with him. Huck goes along with the mistake in order to help Jim escape.