Boo Radley's Maturity In To Kill A Mockingbird

Words: 990
Pages: 4

These chapters show the maturity of Scout and the suspension of the event that Aunt Alexander foreshadowing from the previous chapters. While Scout and Jem are walking to school, they walk by the Radley’s house where they talk about their childhood fears. Scout talks to Jem, “It is a scary place though, ain’t it? I said. Boo doesn’t mean anybody any harm, but I’m right glad you’re along. You know Atticus wouldn’t let you go to the school house by yourself… ain’t you scared of haints? We laughed. Haints, Hot Steams, indications, secret signs, had vanished with our years as mist with sunrise.” [pg. 341] This passage reveals that the Radley’s house is being compared with ghosts and scary things that they were scared of when they were children, …show more content…
Mayella and Tom also get justice although he was killed when he ran away from the prison. Atticus, as a lawyer, thinks that the law is somewhat different for his son, which makes Heck Tate run off from Atticus’s house at the end of the argument. Scout then takes Boo Radley up the stairs to say goodnight to Jem before he goes home. When Boo comes inside his house, Scout images his world when she returns home from the Radley’s house. Atticus is going to read her a story while they are both watching Jem for the night until tomorrow morning when everything is going to be normal again in the town of Maycomb. Scout remembers Atticus’s viewpoint from a stranger, “Atticus was right. One time he said you never really know a man until you stand in his shoes and walk around in them. Just standing on the Radley porch was enough.” [pg. 374] This shows a good ending to the story where the town of Maycomb are returning to its normal status. It also gives the reader a good lesson that not to look at people by their clothes or their external views, but look at people by their inside and their soul by becoming friends with them because after all, the inside is what matters the most in