How does boo radley change in to kill a mockingbird




















He was the man who sot out to convict Tom. He ended up nearly killing them but it was not till Boo Radley came that they could get away. Jem was knocked unconscious and was carried by Boo and Scout ran home. He is accused of doing many wrongful actions, all of which are rumors and things towns people made up.

One rumor that was started about Boo was that he stabbed his father in the leg with a pair of scissors, but this was completely false.

The town of Maycomb thinks Boo is a monster, when he is actually a nice man that does the right thing. To Kill A Boo Radley? Boo Radley may not have appeared until the very end of To Kill A Mockingbird, but the story would not be the same without him.

About the first third of the book, the reader finds that the children have heard stories about how Boo is a terrible person and how he stabbed his father. Even though he is only spoken of, he still does things to change events in the novel without being there. This poor reputation lures the curious minds of Jem, Scout, and Dill.

The children started to torment Mr. Radley by playing games by his yard such as seeing who would go closest to his house. They all saw him as a monster that ate squirrels in the darkness of the night.

Dill is a common young man suffering from neglect. He first lies and says that his new step-father abuses him. If this lie is true, then Dill can stay in Maycomb, where he lives a better life and gets more attention. Aunt Alexandra is a very proud and dignified individual, who feels she knows what is best for the family. When she goes as far as to instruct Atticus to inform the kids about the Finch ancestry, Scout breaks down in tears, realizing that Aunt Alexandra put Atticus up to it.

Ewell from harming two young, defenseless children. Jem and Scout do not think of Boo Radley as an ethical person until the end of the book when they find that he is a well-intentioned young man.

But Boo is undeterred and loves them, even with the probable knowledge that he is the object of their cruel, childish games. Tom also recognizes Mayella as a person in need. On the witness stand, he testifies that he gladly helped her because "'Mr. Ewell didn't seem to help her none, and neither did the chillun. Both men know their town very well.

Unbeknownst to the Finch children, Boo has watched them grow up. The reader can fairly assume that Boo is also familiar with the Ewells, and probably doesn't think much more of them than the rest of Maycomb. Boo and Tom have had minor skirmishes with the law, but that past doesn't tarnish the kindness they show to others in the story. Boo becomes the center of the children's games and imaginations. Eventually just playing isn't enough, the boys want to see Boo.

Reluctantly Scout comes along. They get close to the house in an attempt to see him but get caught and run for their lives. Scared that by attempting to see he will try and hurt or kill him. However, as the book progresses Boo becomes more and more of a positive figure in the children's lives.

He leaves small gifts for Scout and Jem in a tree knot, but most obviously he saves their lives. This is the first and only time we see Boo. Scout fully begins to understand Boo. To my way of thinkin', Mr. Finch, taking the one man who's done you and this town a great service an' draggin' him with his shy ways into the limelight—to me, that's a sin. It's a sin and I'm not about to have it on my head. If it was any other man, it'd be different.

But not this man, Mr.



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