I think that the kids will not meet Boo Radley. He is locked up in the courthouse basement. My first point to support that he is locked up is that hardly anybody in the entire city of Maycomb has seen him. In the book, Jem and Scout said that Boo existed, but nobody has ever seen him for the 15+ years that Boo has been alive. The only time people thought they saw him was at night, when he was looking through people's windows. Perhaps, he may be up to no good since he once was known to have killed chickens and household pets. Boo’s nonexistence added a sense of the unknown and fear to the children. The unknown can generate fear amongst the society. In the meantime, Mr.Radley’s oldest son came home for the holidays and that he was the …show more content…
Next, Boo Radley has never left the house. The book says that the Radleys do not go to church; they worship at home so they do not have to leave their home. In the town of Maycomb, if you do not go to church it was like a sin. The doors and shutters were also closed on Sundays, which is not “normal” for the people of Maycomb; the people think if the shutters are closed on Sundays that there is sickness and cold weather (Lee 11). Thirdly, Boo Radley got locked up in the courthouse basement. He got put in the courthouse basement as a result of cutting his father in the leg with a pair of scissors while cutting some items from the newspaper to add to his scrapbook. Eventually the Sheriff put him in the courthouse basement because he did not have the heart to put him in jail or an asylum. Therefore, the kids will not meet Boo because they are scared of him. Not only are the kids not going to meet Boo because he is locked up, but they will also not be meeting him because they are afraid of him. In addition to that, the kids are also afraid of Boo due to a rumor that is being spread around that Boo does weird things at night. People said that when it was dark outside and the moon was out, he went out and looked into
In the book To Kill A Mockingbird, Atticus Finch is a lawyer and father of two children. He is a very wise man. “You never really understand a person from his point of view --until you climb into his skin and walk around in it.” (Lee 31). This is a quote from Atticus that really sticks the entire book.
That is when they took Boo home and locked him up in his own house. Some fifteen years later some neighbor saw a horrible deed. She saw Boo sitting in the living room just cutting up some magazines and when Mr. Radly walk in Boo took the scissors and stabbed him in the leg. Soon after Mrs. Radley came running out screaming, and police did not want to send the boy in jail, so he sent the boy to the room under the courthouse. He was taken back in his house some time later, but that was only when the court said he die from mold. It also did not help that the Radleys where a closed off and strange family in general in Maycomb. The family did not go to church and had there curtains pulled over the windows on Sunday too. Mr. Radly only came out to ‘work’ and buy what was need and Mrs. Radley was almost never seen, and they were just closed off and no one tried to get close. I also do not think they will meet Boo because Jem and Scout are scared of him. There is the rumor of what he looks like and that just sends chills done their bones. After all the kids thought he “was about six-and-a-half feet tall, judging from his tracks; he dined on raw squirrel and any cats he could catch, that’s why his
In this reading I predict Jem, Scout and Dill will not meet Boo for many reasons. First of all they are afraid of him. He looks like a scary person because he has a terrible scar on his face from when he was younger. Boo’s hands are also covered in blood from all the bad stuff he has done. Boo also drools when he is just standing there.
Initially, Boo is reclusive and seems unhinged. The children gossip that “as Mr. Radley passed by, Boo drove the scissors into his parent’s leg, pulled them out, wiped them on his pants, and resumed his activities” (Lee 13). While the children gossip about Boo Radley, it is brought to light that Boo had apparently stabbed his father and was known to stir up violence. The dark rumors of him committing violent acts towards others characterizes Boo as a despicable monster who is known to incite violence. Lee includes Boo’s acts of violence to highlight how, to the people of Maycomb, Boo’s appears to be savage and aloof.
Throughout this journal, I will predict that the kids will not meet Boo because he is locked up and they are scared of him. First off, Boo is locked up. One reason the kids think he is locked up is because Jem and
I predict that the kids will not meet Boo Radley. I don’t think the kids will meet him because he is locked away and they are too scared. They might not meet him because he is locked away. The reason he is locked away is because he stabbed his dad with a scissors in the leg. Boo’s mom came out screaming that ,“Arthur was killing them all” (Lee 13). The sheriff heard what happened, so he had to lock him in the basement of the police station. He didn’t go to jail like normal because “the sheriff hadn’t the heart to put him in jail alongside Negroes” (Lee 14). After a while they had to just let him go to his dad because he would die from the mold on the walls. Last, the Radley family rarely left the house. They didn’t even go to church
Mr Radley was ashamed of his son’s behaviour when he got into the wrong crowd as a youngster and punished him by locking him up. There is a lot of gossip around Maycomb about Boo and people blame him for any bad things that happen in the neighbourhood, ‘Any stealthy crimes committed in Maycomb were his work.’ Jem turns him into a monster, ‘his hands were blood-stained’, and ‘his eyes popped’. At the end of the novel however, we find that Boo is misunderstood, and gossip of the town’s folk has made him up to be a ‘malevolent phantom’. Scout tells us he is timid, he had, ‘the voice of a child afraid of the dark’.
Scout, Jem, and Dill work many summers to try to get Boo to come out of the Radley house for the first time in many years. Jem had been told many things about Boo in his short years in Maycomb, and he tells his sister Scout about the ‘monster’, saying, “Boo was about 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 bloodstained—if you ate an animal raw, you could never wash the blood off. There was a long jagged scar that ran across his face; what teeth he had were yellow and rotten; his eyes popped, and he drooled most of the time” (chap. 1). Jem’s ideas about Boo are very biased toward rumors that can be heard around Maycomb. This shows how Maycomb’s people often judge before they know, seeing as no one has seen Boo Radley in over twenty years and people are prejudiced to believing the unknown is always bad. Prejudice and rumors can often not be trusted and Boo Radley is no exception. After Miss Maudie’s house catches fire and half the town rushes outside to watch it burn, Atticus tells Scout, “someday you should thank him for covering you up” then Scout asks, “Thank Who?” And gets a response from Atticus, “Boo Radley. You were too busy looking at the fire, you didn’t even notice when he put the blanket around you” (chap. 8). Boo Radley is not really a bad person, he
One of the many characters who is excluded from society in Maycomb because of false town reputations is Boo Radley. One of the town’s biggest gossips, Ms. Stephanie Crawford, first introduces Boo to Jem and Scout by saying, “Boo was sitting in the livingroom… His father entered the room. As Mr. Radley passed by, Boo drove the scissors into his parent’s leg, pulled them out, wiped them on his pants, and resumed his activities” (13). The children are also told that he has been locked in his basement ever since, and warned to stay away from the house by many adults in Maycomb.
His father said that he will watch him and make sure that he does not do anything bad. After a while Boo’s father had kept him locked up for about 15 years, and no one has ever seen him since he first got locked up. After that Boo started to go crazy, one day “Boo was sitting in the living room cutting some items from the Maycomb Tribune to paste into his scrapbook. His father entered the room. As Mr. Radley passed by, Boo drove the scissors into his parents leg, pulled them out, wiped them on his pants, and resumed his activities” (To Kill A Mockingbird 13). He had gone crazy for just being locked up in his house for about 15 years. Boo will most likely end up being locked up into his house for about another 5 more years. In the ending I believe that the kids will not meet Boo because they are to scared of him and that he is still locked up in his
When the Flinch children moved into Maycomb bad rumors were spread about the Radley house, and soon the children were terrified of this “ghostly” neighbor. Little to their knowledge Boo Radley was not a scary mean person like they thought. Boo taught both Jem and Scout that you should not judge people based on what rumors say. For example, in the beginning of the novel Scout and Jem find a knothole in a tree, but when they kept going to the tree there was always something new, like someone had been putting presents for them in their. “I were trotting in our orbit one mild October afternoon when our knot-hole stopped us again. Something white was inside this time.” (page 79). Even though Boo knew that the kids were scared of him and that they believed the rumors he still put effort into making their day and giving them something. Another example was at the very end of the novel when Boo Radley saved Jem and Scouts life. At this moment Scout had a whole new respect for Boo because he wasn't what everyone said. He was better than that. “ A man was passing under it. The man was walking with the staccato steps of someone carrying a load too heavy for him. He was going around the corner. He was carrying jem. Jem’s arm was dangling crazily in front of him.”(page 352). That was Boo that was carrying Jem back to the Flinch house. Boo Radley saved their lives and Scout will never forget him and learned a valuable lesson
I am reading the book To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee. In the first three chapters of the book we were introduced to many characters, we found out about the Radley house, and we learned about the Ewell family. In the second chapter, Dill had dared Jem to touch the Radley house, which Jem accepted because Jem never says no to a dare, and in the third chapter, we met Burris Ewell and Jem was told that she could not read any more by Miss Caroline. In this journal, I will be predicting the kids will not meet Boo because he is locked up and they are scared.
Boo Radley is a ‘malevolent phantom’ and a character that has been shaped by gossips and sustained by children’s imaginations. “Stephanie Crawford, a neighbourhood scold… said she woke up in the middle of the night and saw him looking straight through the window at her.” This dialogue is an example of the gossips and how the legend of Boo Radley developed, lies that persecute his innocence. Setting is used to develop Boo’s surroundings and to summon an eerie atmosphere giving Maycomb reason enough to reject and victimise him for being different. “…rain rotten shingles drooped… oak trees kept the sun away and the remains of a picket fence drunkenly guarded the front yard.” The Radley house has been established as a neglected, out of place and isolated home through Harper Lee’s use of connotative words. This evokes within the reader the same view of Boo as the rest of the town and allows us to understand where the misunderstanding comes from before we
The community has ostracized Boo Radley from the community even though most people don’t know him. “Inside the house lived a malevolent phantom. People said he existed, but Jem and I had never seen him. People said he went out at night when the moon was down, and peeped in windows.” (Lee 5). This is how the community saw Boo Radley in the beginning of the book (Lee). This outlook of Boo has made everyone scared to even walk past his family’s house (Lee). At the end of the book Boo helps Scout and Jem out from an attack from Bob Ewell when they were on their way back home (Lee). After that event they look at Boo differently till the end of the story. This type of discrimination happens in today’s society still and in movies everyone has seen such as the “Sandlot”.
Set in the town of Maycomb County, this novel describes the journey of two young kids growing up in a small-minded town, learning about the importance of innocence and the judgement that occurs within. The individuals of Maycomb are very similar, with the exception of Arthur “Boo” Radley, the town’s recluse. Boo Radley has never been seen outside, and as a result of this, the children in the town are frightened of him and make up rumors about the monstrous things he allegedly does. This leaves the individuals in the town curious as to if Boo Radley really is a “malevolent phantom” like everyone assumes that he is or if he is just misunderstood and harmless. In Harper Lee’s To Kill A Mockingbird, Boo Radley is a saviour. This is