Pikesville
The name of the village the king decided to visit in "Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" is Pikesville.
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.
The Duke was able to identify Huck and the King as frauds when he noticed discrepancies in their story and behavior, leading him to realize they were not the royal family they claimed to be.
Huck's sense of morality and justice drive him to want to steal the gold back from the duke and the king because he believes that they obtained it through deceitful and cruel means. Additionally, Huck forms a bond with the Wilks sisters and feels responsible for them, further motivating him to take action.
Because Huck says he say "n*ggers" going into his bedroom and he didn't say anything. This is a lie. But the king is angry because he believes that Huck should have been smarter about it.
Huck meets the king and the duke in Chapter 19 of "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" by Mark Twain.
the duke and the king
Huck told the king that he escaped by swimming across the river and hiding in the woods until he was able to make his way back.
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.
The doctor dismisses Huck's testimony about the King's authenticity as a Wilkes relative by humorously claiming that Huck must have been confused due to his head injury from a recent fall. He jokes that Huck's fall must have made him see double, leading to his mistaken belief in the King's identity.
the reverend Harvey wilks
Huck posed as a servant boy while the king and duke pretended to be the Duke of Bridgewater and the Dauphin, the long-lost heir to the French throne.
Huck feels sympathetic towards the duke and king when they are tarred and feathered, but he ultimately believes that they deserved this punishment for their deceitful actions. Huck realizes that their behavior caused harm to others and that they had it coming.