Huck is taken to an island in a nearby swamp by a house slave assigned to him to see a "swarm of water mocassins". A little suspicious, he goes anyway out of curiosity and some distance into the swamp is told to "go on ahead I've seen it before" or some such whereby he finds Jim asleep and is reunited. The Grangerford family slaves have provided for Jim and hidden him out in the swamp. The raft was found hung-up on a snag and Jim had gotten it back, reprovisioned it and was waiting to get back on the river with Huck. -roundabout
While staying with the Grangerfords, Huck discovers that Jim is being kept as a runaway slave by the family. Seeing Jim again makes Huck realize how much he values their friendship and prompts him to plan a way to help Jim escape once more.
A slave leads Huck into the swampy area, near the river, where Jim is hiding.
Huck arrives at the Grangerford house after getting separated from Jim during a fog. Jim goes downstream in the raft, while Huck goes ashore and wanders into the Grangerford family's property. He is taken in by the Grangerfords and treated with kindness.
that he is going to kill huck.
No, because all the male Grangerfords had been killed by the Shepherdsons, in their ongoing feud.
The two rivaling families in Huck Finn were the Shepherdsons and the Grangerfords.
Huck stayed with the Grangerford family, who were a wealthy and hospitable clan he encountered while making his way down the Mississippi River. They took him in and treated him as one of their own, unaware that he was a runaway.
Huck learns about the senselessness of feuds and violence from the Grangerfords and Shepherdsons. He witnesses the tragic consequences of their long-standing feud, leading him to question the values of society that promote such animosity. Huck realizes that peace and unity are more important than holding onto grudges.
There were a multiple different times he stayed with people...
Huck avoids getting killed in the feud by faking his own death and hiding out on Jackson Island. He decides to stage his death to escape the ongoing violence between the Grangerfords and Shepherdsons. This plan allows him to stay safe while the feud continues without him.
Buck explains that the feud between the Shepherdsons and the Grangerfords started over a disagreement about a property-line and escalated due to a romantic entanglement between a Shepherdson and a Grangerford.
The Grangerfords in Mark Twain's "Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" are portrayed as a morally ambiguous family. They are hospitable and kind to Huck but are also entangled in a senseless feud with the Shepherdsons that ultimately results in tragedy. This complexity challenges a simple categorization of them as either good or bad.
Huckleberry Finn meets Buck Grangerford when he encounters the Grangerford family at their plantation after running away from the feuding Grangerford and Shepherdson families. Huck befriends Buck and learns more about the family's involvement in the feud.
Mark Twain included the adventure with the Grangerfords in "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" to satirize the aristocratic southern society and highlight the absurdity and hypocrisy of their feuds and social conventions. Through this episode, Twain critiques the senseless violence and rigid social structure that characterized the antebellum South. The Grangerford episode serves as a commentary on the destructive nature of a society built on superficial values and false pride.