Huck and Jim leave the baby's bottle in the house as a sign that they were never actually there, in an attempt to avoid suspicion and any potential consequences of their presence being discovered. They want to minimize any evidence that could link them to the house and to their activities.
Huck leaves the widow's house because he feels confined by the rules of civilization and yearns for freedom and independence. He is seeking adventure and doesn't want to be restricted by societal norms.
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.
George Jackson
He told Huck that Jim had been sold as a runaway slave!!!
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.
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.
The house Jim and Huck find is floating down the river, which is unusual because houses are typically stationary structures on land.
Huck asks Mary Jane to leave town because he knows that her uncles, the King and the Duke, are conmen who are trying to swindle her out of her inheritance. He wants to protect her from their deceitful schemes.
He told Huck that Jim had been sold as a runaway slave!!!
She had seen campfire smoke on Jackson island.
In the book The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn Huck's father dies. Jim finds him when he and Huck are floating down the river on a raft. They find a floating house and inside Jim find the dead body of Huck's father.
a dead body