A Closer Look at Boo Radley's Eccentric Character in Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird

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Set in the 1940’s, Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird features a man named Arthur Radley, though the people of Maycomb know him as Boo. He is described as a malevolent phantom, hence his nickname, that eats cats and is over seven feet tall. Boo is known as the town recluse and madman. Nevertheless, there may be some reason for his eccentric behavior. As said by William Shakespeare, “Though this be madness, yet there is method in’t.”

Boo Radley is the character in To Kill a Mockingbird that best portrays the idea of madness. His behavior is definitely considered eccentric. As a teenager, Boo got involved with the wrong crowd of people. The group he was in was considered by the other characters as the closest thing to a gang that Maycomb has seen. The first time we see Boo really get in trouble is when he and the group stole the sheriff’s car. This crime led Boo to being sentenced to going to a reformatory school. However, Mr. Radley, Boo’s father, convinced the judge to let him keep him in the house instead, for it would be a disgrace to send him to the reformatory school. After being locked up in his own house, he stabs his father in the leg with a pair of scissors fifteen years after the incident with the sheriff’s car. When Mr. Radley died, Boo’s brother, Nathan, came to take care of him.

Boo’s eccentricities include stabbing his father, never leaving the house, and leaving strange things in the knothole of a tree for the children to play with. Looking at these things, one would assume that Boo’s mental health is not in the best shape. However, digging deeper, we find that there may be some reason to his madness. We know Boo was not in his right mind. In fact, his mindset seemed to have more qualities of a child than those o...

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...hildren: he left them toys in the knothole and put a blanket around Scout’s shoulders when she was outside in the cold. Though they probably were unaware, Boo looked out for them. If Boo had not stopped Bob Ewell from getting to the children on their way home from the Halloween pageant, he probably would have killed them. Added to these things, Boo’s madness played an important part in Scout’s growing up and maturing. Meeting Boo, talking to him, and standing on his porch looking at the neighborhood through his eyes really enabled Scout to learn to stand in someone else’s shoes and look at things from others’ points of view.

Over all, Boo’s eccentricity played a crucial part in delivering the true story of To Kill a Mockingbird. There may be a great amount of truth and wisdom in Shakespeare’s words, for behind the mask of this phantom lies a story yet to be told.

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