The runaway slave in "Huckleberry Finn" is Jim, who escapes from captivity and forms a close bond with the main character, Huck. Jim is a central figure in the novel, and his pursuit of freedom mirrors Huck's own search for independence and moral understanding.
I believe his name is Jim.
In "Adventures of Huckleberry Finn," the Phelps lock up Jim because they believe he is a runaway slave and they intend to return him to his rightful owner. They do not realize Jim's true identity or his relationship with Huck, leading to a tense situation as Huck tries to come up with a plan to free Jim.
In "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn," Jim's daughter's name is not mentioned. Jim is a runaway slave who becomes a father figure to Huck during their journey.
He told Huck that Jim had been sold as a runaway slave!!!
Huck has learned to appreciate Jim's humanity
He had not turned Jim over to the two men looking for runaway slaves.
Freedom because Huck and Jim do pretty much whatever they want, but they have to be careful of other people since Jim is a runaway.
In 'The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn,' Huck learned that Mrs. Loftus' husband was going to use a gun to capture and turn in his friend, Jim for the reward money. While she was compassionate toward Huck's plight as a runaway child, she had no such compassion for a runaway slave.
Huck learns that Jim is suspected of being a runaway slave and that there is a reward offered for his capture. Mrs. Loftus advises Huck to turn Jim in, but Huck decides to help Jim escape instead.
The king and the duke rub lampblack on Jim's face to disguise him as an Indian. They dress him in ragged clothes and tell others that he is a runaway apprentice who is sick with smallpox to avoid suspicion.
The young boy warns Huck that people are looking for Jim because he has run away. He tells Huck that Jim is suspected of murdering Huck.