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.
They got separated and could not find each other.
Jim and Huck got separated when they were traveling down the Mississippi River on a raft. They were separated during a foggy night while trying to avoid a steamboat. Huck ends up on the shore with a family who mistakes him for their long-lost son, and Jim is captured and taken back into slavery.
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.
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.
In the dense fog on the river, Huck and Jim miss their exit and end up floating past it, losing their way in the river's intricate twists and turns. They become disoriented and can't find their way back. Jim and Huck were trying to reach the city of Cairo in Illinois so Jim could get to the free states and be a free man.
Internal Conflict: Huck dealing with his conscience(society), and his acceptance for Jim as equal to him. External Conflict: Pap beating up Huck, when Huck and Jim got separated, Jim and Huck camping out in bad weather.
Mrs. Phelps mistook Huck for her nephew, Tom Sawyer, who was expected to arrive for a visit. Huck goes along with the mistaken identity to try and help Jim escape.
Jim compliments Huck by saying, "You's de bes' fren' Jim's ever had; en you's de only fren' ole Jim's got now." This highlights Jim's deep appreciation for Huck's friendship and loyalty.
Huck and Jim couldn't escape the steamboat at first because their own raft had drifted away and was going far down river. Their only option was the robber's boat back up on the steamboat. When they got there, the robber's were loading it with goods they stole but went back for more. Huck and Jim took advantage of this time and took their boat to save themselves. Huck later sent someone else to rescue the robber's before they drowned on the ship.
yes it does but it cools down as time goes bye because it got separated
Jim Cramer has written many books. They are: Jim Cramer's Getting Back to Even, Jim Cramer's Real money, Jim Cramer' Stay Mad for Life, Jim Cramer's Mad Money, You Got Screwed! and Confessions of a Street Addict.
Huck's unexpected visitor got in the room by climbing through the window because the door was locked.