Loss Of Innocence In To Kill A Mockingbird

Words: 462
Pages: 2

As it creaking up the window… what was that? The sound of its movement is extremely horrifying, it was like something is slobbering outside the window… oh no, not again. The famous novel “To Kill A Mockingbird”, was written by Harper Lee that set in the 1930s, Alabama. This story was from a child’s perspective, Jean Louise Finch, also known as Scout. Scout is a 6 years old, she is a tomboy who hates to be in a dress, she would rather use her fists to solve the problem than her head, and she believes in everything that everyone would tell her. As a child, Scout would always hear all the rumors about Boo Radley, the mysterious neighbor, as a hideous monster or a ferocious boogeyman, and she’d always believe all the rumors that she heard about …show more content…
In this novel, Scout encountered or was exposed to many different things and she has lost her innocence several times, but her most crucial loss of innocence moment was when she comes to realize that Boo Radley saves her and her brother’s life from Mr. Ewell. From that moment on, she knows that he is her friendly neighbor and her kind friend. In the beginning, Scout has never had a chance to meet Boo so her imaginary of Boo is wild and crazy, but when she met him for the first time in pages 310, chapter 29, when she said, “Hey Boo!” It brings her to tears, and these tears are tears of gratitude and happiness. This shows that she has finally come to a realization that all the bad rumors that she has been hearing and all the assumptions that she has been making are all false. Scout’s attitude changes toward Boo and it demonstrates that she has lost her innocence and learned to empathize others. She no longer sees him as a mysterious neighbor or a cold and scary monster, but instead she now sees him as a person and a real human who has been suffered by the cruel society and as a superhero, which allows her to see him as a tender, caring, albeit reclusive man he truly is. She cares so much about him, and she appreciates for everything he has done for her and her brother, Jem. So now what she has developed for Boo is nothing but the fondness “... when they finally saw him, why he hadn’t done any of those things… Atticus, he