NO where in particular. Just away!
Huck goes to Jim, a slave who has escaped from Miss Watson, because they both want to flee their current circumstances. Huck comes up with the idea of faking his death and running away by overhearing his guardians' plan to sell him for his money.
Huck and Jim go to Cairo in hopes of reaching a free state where Jim can gain his freedom. Cairo is near the northern border of a free state, making it a crucial waypoint in their journey to escape the bonds of slavery.
Huck didn't leave the two men and go down the river with Jim because he felt a sense of loyalty and friendship towards Jim, as they had been through a lot together. Huck also didn't want to abandon Jim, who was a runaway slave seeking freedom, as he believed it was the right thing to do despite societal expectations.
Jim: just as he was about to be executed, the townspeople realize that Miss Watson freed him (in her will) when she died 2 months earlier. Huck: the dead man found on the island earlier in the book was Huck's father; he takes his money and goes on adventures out west. Tom: his leg was shot, so that eventually recovers; he then settles down eventually.
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
It is because he feels remorse over tricking Jim. Huck sees that Jim is smart because Jim caught him in his (stupid) lie. Huck then realizes that he is a person, not anything below that. Also, and more importantly, he lies to the boaters about having a dad with the small pox on the raft so that they don't take Jim away to slavery. Huck still thinks what he's doing is wrong, and that he's going to go to hell for it, but in the end he decided that Jim was worth it.
Huck protects Jim by pretending to be his owner and creating stories to deceive those who might try to capture Jim. He also physically helps Jim by providing food, helping him escape, and standing up for him when others question Jim's presence. Ultimately, Huck risks his own safety and reputation to ensure Jim's freedom.
they get dressed in the wigwam. which is like a room built on the raft.
He expreses it through Jim. the slave. Jim was supposivly let go by his owner, to go find a place to live. In the old Huck Finn, Jim talks to Huck a little bit what being a slave is about. I don't really know. That's a hard question ! Good Luck
Since Huck's actual father never acted like he was one, Jim and Huck develop a filial relationship. Primarily, Huck looks up to Jim as a father figure, but Huck additionally looks out for Jim like a father would his son. And, of course, they are very close and trusting friends.
Huck Finn rows out in a canoe to a boat that has two slave hunters. When Huck Finn is approached by the slave hunters, he says that his father, mother, and sister, Mary Ann, all have small pox. However, this is just a tall tale that Huck makes up, because he doesn't want the slave hunters to go near the raft which Jim is on. Therefore, the slave hunters are afraid to go near the raft and don't capture Jim.
Jim and Huck decided to seek help from a doctor after Tom was wounded during the escape from the Phelps' farm. They realized that Tom needed medical attention and it was the best course of action to ensure his survival.