"To Kill a Mockingbird"- The Misjudging of Boo Radley

             It's simple to judge others before actually getting to know them. In Harper Lees novel, To Kill A Mockingbird Boo Radley, the neighborhood eccentric, is often misjudged by the community. .

             Stephanie Crawford, the neighborhood gossip, makes up many stories about the Radleys. She justifies that she knows everything there is to know about them. An interesting story she revealed about Boo Radley was that she saw him watching her through her window in the middle of the night. When Stephanie told Miss. Maudie, a caring neighbor in Maycomb, Miss. Maudie said "What did you do, Stephanie, move over in the bed and make room for him?"( Lee 45 ). A few people in the community are bright enough not to believe this tale, but many others did. .

             Another wild story about Boo Radley is that he devours raw squirrels and any cats he can catch. That's why the town believes his hands are bloodstained. No one in the neighborhood knows or wants to know Boo Radley. They shouldn't judge him without knowing him. Its like Atticus, a father of two and a town lawyer, said, "If you learn a simple trick, scout, you'll get a long a lot better with all kinds of folks. You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point of view - until you climb into his skin and walk around in it,"( Lee 30 ).

             The superb example of the way the town misjudges Boo Radley is because of another rumor Stephanie Crawford began. According to Miss. Stephanie, Boo was in the living room cutting out some items from the newspaper to paste in his scrapbook. His father came into the living room. As Mr. Radley passed by, Boo drove the scissors into his parents leg and then continued cutting out the items. .

             Boo Radley proves to the town that he is a caring man by doing many things. A good example is when he puts things such as gum and soap carvings of Scout, daughter of Atticus, and Jem, son of Atticus, into the tree for them to find.

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