He wanted to protect him from the knowledge. Also, internally, he knew that if Huck didn't have a reason to be hiding out on the island, and later to head towards "free territory" than he himself would be out of luck.
Jim does not tell Huck who the dead man is because he is trying to protect Huck from the truth. Huck's reaction to finding out that the dead man is Pap might be too overwhelming for him, so Jim keeps this information from him to shield him from unnecessary pain and distress.
Jim didnt tell Huck that the dead man they found was actually hucks father
because it is hucks dad
Jim kept the dead man's identity a secret from Huck to protect him from the harsh reality that the dead man was Huck's father. He wanted to shield Huck from the emotional burden and potential trauma of finding out the truth about his family.
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.
Chapter 4: "Jim had a hair-ball as big as your fist, which had been took out of the fourth stomach of an ox. ... He said it knowed everything. What I wanted to know was, what [Pap] was going to do, and was he going to stay?" (text shortened)
The character who used a hair ball from an ox to tell Huck's future in "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" is Jim, the enslaved man who accompanies Huck on his journey down the Mississippi River. Jim uses the hair ball to supposedly divine information about Huck's fate and future adventures.
Huck described St. Petersburg as a small town in Missouri where he lived with the Widow Douglas.
The dead man found in the floating house in chapter 9 was pap. The man was shot in the back, and Jim told Huck not to look at his face because it was "too gashly." He then covered him up with rags, but, at the time, Huck didn't even look at him once because he didn't want to see him. Huck did not know until the last page of the book that that was his father, when Jim revealed the identity of the dead man in the house.
Huck is upset when Jim is sold because he has grown close to Jim throughout their journey, seeing him as a friend and even a father figure. Huck also feels guilty for not coming forward to reveal that Jim is a free man, as he promised to keep Jim's escape a secret.
In the very last part of "Huckleberry Finn," Jim tells Huck that his father, Pap Finn, has died a few days ago in the floating house. He also shares that Tom Sawyer has been shot in the leg while escaping Jim Turner's gang, but is expected to recover.
Jim and Huck find the house to be a mess, and find whiskey, playing cards, and obscene graffiti (symbolizing human vices). Most importantly, they find the body of Huck's murdered father, who was shot in the back. Jim makes sure Huck doesn't see his face, so Huck doesn't know that his father was killed.
Huck thought it a derangement of Jim ethical character to think to steal another man's property.
Jim covers the dead man's face out of respect for the deceased. It is a common cultural practice to cover the face of a deceased person as a sign of reverence and to maintain their dignity. It also helps to shield others from the unsettling sight of a dead body.
The lady in town tells Huck about the tragic murder of the Grangerford family members by the Shepherdsons. She warns Huck to stay away from the feud between the two families.