Theme Of Loss Of Innocence In To Kill A Mockingbird

Words: 625
Pages: 3

To kill a Mockingbird is a book still talked about today, still stirring up people. It is a book still being banned and unbanned. True it uses words that might make people uncomfortable, but it was meant to do that. However this book could be very eye opening and people might be afraid of that. If you’ve read through the book and you finished it, did you put it down with a sigh and sit in silence? Taking in all that you read? If you have, maybe you have subconsciously realized the theme, and you would realize that theme always happens. The loss of innocence is something everyone goes through, some ‘coming of ages’ are worse than others. In To kill a Mockingbird loss of innocence seems to be around every corner. Tom Robinson was falsely accused of raping Mayella Ewell. She had come onto him and he denied her advances. Finally Mr. …show more content…
We are introduced to him as a weird creep who comes out only at night, and eats cats. He has many rumors floating around him and children are frightened of the imagine of him. But yet in many chapters we see from Scout that he is none of these. With the laughter of the tire hitting the Radley house when she was in it, to the gifts in the tree knot. This is almost a childlike innocence. Then in the later chapters he saves Jem and Scout from Bob Ewell. Scout meets him for the first time, stays by his side and then walks him home. She never sees him again. “ … she would see Arthur Radley escorting me down the sidewalk, as any gentleman would do...Boo and I walked up the steps to the porch. His fingers found the doorknob. He gently released my hand, opened the door, went inside, and shut the door behind him.” (Lee 373) From this man who was unknown and seen as creepy he soon became a savior to Scout. With perhaps the strangest gift to her and Jem, a knife in a man’s ribs. “ ‘Bob Ewell’s lyin’ on the ground under that tree yonder with a kitchen knife stuck up under his ribs…’” (Lee