Huck didn't expect it's mate to come and bite Jim, injecting him with venom
Huck plays the trick on Jim in Chapter 10 of "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn." In this chapter, Huck and Jim encounter two con men, the King and the Duke, who try to exploit them. Huck plays a trick on Jim by pretending that the events of the previous night were just a dream.
so when do you think we can have some fun in our sleep? oh maybe tomorrow when we hit land. i will make that snake go silly. you know what snake im talkin about
Because so he could think about, of he did to Jim, about the rattle snake.
A dead snake.
Aunt Sally gave Huck and Tim a beating because she mistakenly thought they were playing a trick on her by hiding in the pantry. She was probably frustrated and reacted impulsively before realizing her mistake.
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.
Huck puts the dead rattlesnake by Jim as a prank to scare him, knowing that Jim is superstitious and afraid of snakes. This incident highlights Huck's mischievous nature and their complex relationship throughout the novel.
Jim is initially angry at Huck for playing a trick on him, but he eventually forgives him after seeing how upset Huck is. Jim understands that Huck didn't mean any harm and values their friendship more than holding a grudge.
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.
One of the tricks Huck plays on Jim is pretending that their separation and Huck's adventure with the Duke and Dauphin was just a dream, leading Jim to believe that he dreamed about Huck getting lynched. It plays with Jim's emotions and causes him distress before revealing the truth.
In "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn," Huck tricks Jim by pretending that the events they experienced on the raft were all just a dream. He tells Jim that the events from the night before, where they got separated and were both worried about each other, were just something he imagined. Huck then reveals the truth to Jim, who is both relieved and hurt by the trick.
Yes, the reader's attitude towards Jim may change as they see Jim respond with wisdom and compassion to Huck's trick in chapter 15. Jim's empathy and understanding towards Huck's actions can endear him to readers, showing his generous and forgiving nature despite being deceived.