Why Is Boo Radley Telling In To Kill A Mockingbird

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Pages: 2

Another character which author Lee portrays as a mockingbird is of Boo Radley, because he never has intention to harm anyone. During the period when he stays at his house, at that time also he never make any attempt that causes trouble for his neighbors, his attitude makes him a mockingbird. In between the novel, when one of the neighbor’s houses catches the fire, then in that situation he silently put the blanket on Scout’s shoulder to save her from the fire and the cold. Near at the end of the novel, when Bob Ewell tries to kill Atticus’s kids then in that critical situation he kills Bob Ewell just to saves Scout and Jem from being kill by Bob Ewell. Though his action is necessary to take at that situation, so Sheriff Tate and Atticus Finch …show more content…
Know everything that's happened here since before I was born. There's a black boy dead for no reason, and the man responsible for it's dead. Let the dead bury the dead this time, Mr. Finch. Let the dead bury the dead" (Lee 369). This statement reflects that the decision of hiding the truth of Bob’s murder from the Maycomb town members is a kind of justice with Tom Robinson due to the reason that Bob Ewell provides an invalid and false witness to the court and due to which Tom Robinson loses his life. Hence, by providing effective example of these mockingbird, the author makes the novel more interesting and the novel successfully conveys one other message that sometimes, incidents happen in a way where individual need to take a decision beyond the laws though it is also not a correct way, but still it is also not incorrect and if the a person do not think deeply then might be possible, the person may take a decision in which an innocent has to suffer which is also not a righteous. Moreover, by providing the Bob’s murder situation in the novel, the author shows that Atticus and Sheriff Tate save the life of a mockingbird and to save a mockingbird is not a