Evilness In To Kill A Mockingbird

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In the beginning of the novel, To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, Scout Finch is a good-hearted, innocent five-year-old who has no experience with the evils of the world. However, throughout the novel, Scout has her first contact with the evils of the world in the form of prejudice. Arthur “Boo” Radley — one of the two cases — is a harmless human-being who falls victim to this evilness. Regarded as an evil person, Boo is the “ghost” of Maycomb and is used as the scapegoat for anything bad which happens. However, growing up in the house of Atticus Finch, Scout learns that humanity is evil at times, but there is also a lot of good humanity has to offer. Not only is there good, but what may seem evil at the time, if approached with an outlook …show more content…

This implies how a mockingbird is an innocent, harmless creature that does nothing but sing beautiful songs, so if his children kill a mockingbird, it is considered the same as committing a sin. Harper Lee takes the title for her novel from this passage, and it is because the imagery of a mockingbird is comparable to the image of Boo Radley. Boo Radley is seen through the eyes of other people and does not have a character of his own. Whatever it is that we think we know about Boo is known from what other people believe to be true. Boo is believed to be “Six-and-a-half feet tall judging from his tracks: he dined on raw squirrels and any cats he could catch, that’s why his hands were blood-stained … What teeth he had were yellow and rotten; his eyes popped, and he drooled most of the time” (Lee 14). Obviously most of this statement and other stories we have heard about Boo are all fiction. The symbol of the mockingbird can be applied to Boo Radley from this point of view as well. Mockingbirds are known for imitating songs from other birds, however, do not have songs of their own. Therefore, the same way a mockingbird makes itself present is seen through other birds, the same can be said about Boo Radley and his presence seen through the town of …show more content…

To cause the death of one or more human beings is the act known as killing – this is not what is mentioned in the bible. If your own life or the life of someone else is at risk, you have the obligation to defend yourself, even if that would result in the death of your assailant. In our case, Bob Ewell had the intentions to hurt the children, maybe even wanting to end their lives, which resulted in Jem’s broken arm and the death of Bob Ewell. Boo Radley did what had to be done and put a stop to Mr. Ewell, however, if word got out that Boo Radley “killed” Mr. Ewell, who, besides Atticus and his family, would take the side of Boo Radley? Scout tells us that “Well, it 'd be sort of like shootin ' a mockingbird, wouldn 't it?” (Lee 317). In this scene, Atticus is not one hundred percent sure if Scout truly understands the whole situation, however, to Atticus’s surprise, Scout makes the comparison with Boo Radley to a mockingbird. The same way a mockingbird never harmed a soul, the same can be said about Boo Radley. It would be a sin if a day would come when Boo is brought to trial for the death of Bob Ewell, while he was only trying to protect the lives’ of Scout and

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