The clear villain in to kill a mockingbird is Bob Ewell. Ewell is sneaky, rude, and hostile towards Maycomb. Bob Ewell is best fit for the villain in To Kill A Mockingbird because he attempts to kill the Finch children, accuses a man for assaulting his daughter as an excuse for his own misdoing, and by hits his very own daughter.
In the final pages of the book, Bob Ewell tries to kill the Finch children because of their father's efforts against him in the trial. “He slowly squeezed the breath out of me. I could not move.” Mr. Ewell snuck behind the finch children and almost killed scout. He tried to choke Scout but Boo Radley came in and wrestled him off. If there was to be a hero in this book, it would be boo Radley, for stopping Mr. Ewell and saving the finch kids. He was very brave by coming out of his house to lend a hand. Because Mr. Ewell is angry and hostile towards Atticus for his valiant efforts in the trial, Ewell becomes a villain by trying to kill Atticus’ kids.
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Because he did not want to get caught, he blamed his mistakes on Tom Robinson, who goes to jail for Ewell’s misdoings. “Mr. Ewell’s face grew scarlet. He stood up and pointed his finger at Tom Robinson. “—I seen that black man yonder ruttin’ on my Mayella!” In the trial, Atticus cross-examined Mr. Ewell. He did a very good job of it and made Mr. Ewell angry and he lashed out. His face grew scarlet because he was afraid that the judge would find out he was the one who actually hit his daughter. Mr. Ewell lied for his own sake in the trial and said that Tom Robinson is the one who gave Mayella her injuries. He did not want to be a suspect so he blamed it on a man who he knew would be easily charged. This makes him a villain, from becoming dishonest and lying. Mr. Ewell’s actions in the trial were immoral as well shameless, earning him the spot of the main villain in To Kill a
Boo Radley is the “Mockingbird” within the novel, To Kill A Mockingbird written by Harper Lee. “The mockingbird, a serene creature with nothing but beautiful music to offer…. often people respond to situations because of the unknown or past rather than the truth” (Stiltner 1). A Mockingbird is a bird that does nothing but sing beautiful songs.
Throughout the trial Atticus finds holes in the Ewels case. As certain evadidacne points to Mycellas father who committed the crime. Certain people are not like Mr.Ewell take Atticus for example as he defended Tom Robinson up until he was shot dead in jail. When Tom was in prison he was shot trying to escape according to the guards but it could have been a racial thing other than he was trying to escape.
With their unbeknownst number of kids the Ewell brood, specifically Bob Ewell becomes jealous and outright angry that Atticus would oppose him in the court of law by representing Tom Robinson. Although against the odds Atticus feels empathetic towards the Ewells not necessarily Bob but instead for Mayella, he understands what she is being put through, Suffering through domestic abuse, and in court Atticus even goes so far as to state that he feels sorry for Mayella. To add to this he implies that the man truly guilty of beating Mayella is in the courtroom (Bob Ewell). This did nothing to calm Bob Ewell’s seething manner instead it only escalated it, and in an attempt to get back at atticus he tries to kill his children whom are saved by an unseen and unknown force which killed Mr. Ewell. The precursor towards this however was when Bob Ewell spit on Atticus but even through this Atticus was rational, he thought about it.
Final Essay Outline: Thesis Statement/opening paragraph: In the story To Kill A Mockingbird, discrimination and the act of being prejudice is common among the main characters, on both the receiving and serving end. Certain characters, like Scout and Jeremy Finch, Bob Ewell, and the town folk truly create the main problem and set the theme of the story. For example, when Bob Ewell accuses Atticus Finch of being an african-american lover, because he is defending Tom Robinson. Tom Robinson was accused of raping Mayella Ewell, according to Bob. Boo Radley is accused of being dead by Scout, Jem and Dill.
Even in a society that, overall, is diverse, people with similar ideas and experiences tend to congregate in small groups, where they are comfortable. It is much easier to remain in homogenous groups, among those who understand each other. When different groups combine, many different life experiences and points of view will be present and will potentially clash. Misunderstanding is bound to occur in some form when individuals of different backgrounds interact. When misunderstandings occur, people tend to respond with violence, fear, or stereotyping.
In the part two of the book, Tom Robinson, a black man is accused of raping a white woman, Mayella Ewell. The social norm of this time was to respect whites, and treat blacks differing. Therefore, it was a sin for Tom to disrespect Mayella. Atticus Finch, a lawyer and respected white man fought for Tom and bravely tried as his lawyer. On trial, there was evidence that Bob Ewell, Mayella’s father beat, and raped her.
In reality he was a victim of Bob and Mayella’s plan to cover up what truly happened, which was that Mayella tried to seduce Tom and Bob saw it. Atticus proved to the jury that Tom didn’t rape her and that he didn’t hit her, “… Mayella Ewell was beaten savagely by someone who led exclusively with his left… Tom Robinson now sits before you, having taken the oath with the only good hand he possesses-his right hand.” (Atticus, pg. 232). Atticus also implies that it was Bob Ewell who hit her when he saw what she was doing by asking a rhetorical question, “Her father saw it… What did her father do?”
Mayella Ewell, the prosecutor, blamed Tom Robinson, the defendant, of rape on the night of November 21, 1935 at Mayella’s home in Maycomb, Alabama. The trial brought up included Tom Robinson, Mayella and Robert Ewell, Heck Tate, and Atticus Finch. Heck Tate and Robert Ewell were the witnesses for Mayella’s side and Atticus was the lawyer to Tom Robinson. This was such an important trial, whether the event actually happened or not, because Tom is a black man and Mayella is a white woman. The evidence provided shows that Tom most likely did not rape or beat Mayella, but her father was the one who could have beat her.
To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee is the story of a small town named Maycomb Located in Alabama, highlighting the adventures of the finch children and many other people in the small town. The people in this town are very judgemental and of each other and it often leads to people being labeled with stereotypes and people think they know everything about that person however that is not reality. It is not possible to know the reality of a person 's life by placing a stereotype without seeing it through their own eyes and experiencing the things they experience. This happens often throughout the story with many people in the town. People are labeled as many things such a “monster” a “nigger” and many other things that seem to put them in their
Atticus is known around town as one of the best lawyers. Bob knows this and still lies in front of the court, committing perjury. First, Bob Ewell shows the most courage in the novel because he tried to murder
Ewell's behavior is revealed to be hostile and rash. His English is informal and his behavior is rude. When Robert is proven to be lying about the story he begins to act like how his son Burris did to his teacher. It is also revealed that he was the one to give Mayella all the injuries Sheriff Taft witnessed after it was discovered that Mr. Robinson has no mobile use of his left arm. And if Mayella had a bruised right eye the person must be left handed and it is revealed that Mr. Ewell is left handed after Atticus tested him by asking him to write out his name on a piece of paper.
Mayella Ewell is a victim. Mayella is a victim of her father, Bob Ewell, because he is an alcoholic that abuses her. During the Tom Robinson trial, Atticus proved Bob Ewell to be left-handed. Based on Bob and Heck Tate’s testimonies, Mayella’s right eye was blackened
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…..”
In this paragraph I will be questioning the Ewells’ reasoning for lying. While reading the court scenes, I got the feeling that Mayella and Bob had separate motives for trying to convict Tom. There are quite a few reasons that Bob would want Tom Robinson convicted. His most demanding motive would have to be the need to cover up the fact that he abuses his children.
Another quote shows how wrong Mr. Ewell acts:”I seen that black nigger yonder ruttin’ on my Mayella!” Mr. Ewell (Lee, 92) In the novel he accuses an innocent man of raping and hitting his child Mayella however that is not the true story he because is lying, he hit her. While Atticus chooses the right moral dilemma and he also has humanity: "Which, gentlemen, we know is in itself a lie as black as Tom Robinson's skin, a lie I do not have to point out to you. You know the truth, and the truth is this: some Negroes lie, some Negroes are immoral, some Negro men are not to be trusted around women—black or white.