The description of the Radley house comes off as scary and creepy to the kids at first. Until they realize that Boo Radley is a really nice person. And that you can’t judge a book by its cover. Just because the house looked scary on the outside doesn’t mean that the people that live on the inside are mean and evil, or whatever come to think that they are. This contributed to the saying earlier in the book where it said: “You never know a man until you stand in his shoes and walk around in them.” - (Atticus Finch). The kids and no one in town knew why Boo Radley, only came out at night they were or anything they were just so quick to judge. They didn’t know why their house was scary or even why they like for it to look the way that it looks.
In the beginning of the book, Jem has a prejudice against Arthur/Boo Radley. Jem and his friend Dill, would make up stories about Boo eating cats, stabbing people with scissors and being a “monster” even though they have never met him before. In chapter 7, Jem goes into Arthur Radley’s backyard to spy on him, but then losses his pants. When he goes back later to retrieve his breeches, they are folded over the fence. Jem thinks that Boo left them for him because they were sewn together “all crooked.”
In the book we see the Radley house which has over grown grass around the house and the area the house is in is all alone. The Geography of this house makes us then emphasize the fact that the people living in it are scary and mean. At the end of the book, we learn that Boo is not scary or mean. Although this is what the author intended to do in the beginning and make us confused in the end. Another big indicator is that the Radley’s yard has a broken fence which was used to sneak into Boo Radley’s yard and there is also tall
They have to face the horror of racism and judgment, but in the end they grow up and learn valuable life lessons. In the book To Kill a Mockingbird written by Harper Lee, Boo Radley is an innocent man who cares for children and has been judged his whole life. Boo Radley has been criticized for most of his
This quote shows how the kids are playing the Boo Radley game and believing the common notion, instead of investigating further into the details to find the truth before possibly believing in lies. Also this quote shows how Jem is afraid to tell Atticus the truth due to the fact that Atticus will be mad, disheartened, and saddened. For instance the town all believes that Boo Radley stuck his father with a pair of scissors while Boo was trimming the newspaper scrapbooking, how does the town know this? Yes their was a call by Mrs.Radley but there is
When Scout and Jem are sneaking into Boo Radley’s house, it is described with “a ramshackle porch ran the width of the house; there were two doors and two dark windows between the doors. Instead of a column, a rough two-by-four supported one end of the roof,” (Lee 53). These details suggest that there may be something ominous in the house, and as the children explore, the story is filled with intense fear. The author uses this word choice to create a sense of mystery and tension in the story as the readers are intrigued about the actions that will follow. Later in the story during the time that the kids are attacked by Bob Ewell, Lee describes the setting as, “the night was still.
‘Boo Radley. You were so busy looking at the fire you didn’t know it when he put the blanket around you’”(Lee 76). This quote yet again shows that Boo Radley has nothing but good intentions. He acts with kindness despite the fact that the children he is helping are the same ones who have attempted to torment him many times. He is often seen as a scary man and one that does not abide by the way Maycomb functions
Just standing on the Radley porch was enough. ”(279). Scout uses her imagination to try and view all the past events that have occurred through Boo’s eyes. When she does this she realizes that Boo isn’t a bad person at all, he is actually kind of like a guardian angel. Boo Radley’s character proves a great point that we should never judge or assume things about another person that we know nothing
There was nowhere to run, Nowhere to escape. I was a prisoner locked up in jail. A prisoner who will stay in jail forever never knowing how the outside looks or how it feels to be outside . I was nonexistent to everyone around Maycomb. I was a ghost.
" This shows that Boo Radley is the in a way “outside character”. He can sense that there are many horrors of the world destroying the innocence, or the mockingbird in this case, so he chooses to ignore
Since Mr. Radley never came out of the house, frightening rumors spread about him and the children all knew them. They even played games where they reenacted the story that was spread around about him, not realizing how disgraceful it was to the Radleys. Towards the end the book, Scout finally get to meet Boo Radley after Bob Ewell attempted to kill her and Jem. Scout took Mr. Radley home and on the way back she thought, “Atticus was right. One time he said you never really know a man until you stand in his shoes and walk around in them.
In the novel To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, main characters Scout and Jem Finch show a major change in their perspective towards Arthur Radley. Arthur Radley, also known as ‘Boo’, is a young man who is never seen out of his house. His mysterious behavior sparks the kids curiosity towards him. At the beginning of the novel, the children are terrified of Boo. Their minds are filled with stories and rumors that have been passed around the little town.
As the kids see and experience more in the world, they lose their innocence. In the beginning of To Kill A Mockingbird, Scout and Jem are terrified of Arthur Radley. They would make rumors up about him because he never came out of his house, dubbing him “Boo Radley”
In To Kill A Mockingbird Boo Radley is a man who always stays shut up inside of his house which causes many rumors about him to be spread around the town. For instance, at the end of chapter 14 it’s stated “Dill?”/ “Mm?”/ “Why do you reckon Boo Radley’s never run off?”/ Dill sighed a long sigh and turned away from me./ “Maybe he doesn 't have anywhere to run off to…” This shows how Boo Radley is emotionally struggling because people always are assuming things about him that can cause him to feel uncomfortable around others. At the end of the book Boo Radley acts afraid of everything like when it says “Will You take me home?’ He almost whispered it, in the voice of a child afraid of the dark.”
In the book, To Kill A Mockingbird, the author Harper Lee shows that we shouldn’t be too quick to judge another person’s character based on outward appearance and the stories and rumors we have heard. The character Boo Radley is a perfect example of why we shouldn’t be hasty to judge. On the outside, Boo looks like a scary neighbor that lives just a few houses away. “.....he had sickly white hands that had never seen the sun. His face was as white as his hands…..”
Boo Radley had been kept in isolation for so long, he didn’t know how to communicate or socialise properly. He has been misunderstood as a malevolent person, when he actually is a benevolent person. He displays this when he put a blanket around Scout, whilst she and Jem watched the fire. As readers, we are shown social prejudice by the assumptions made about the Radley’s. Another example of social prejudice is the