Who is heck tate really protecting
What is the significance of the gifts Boo Radley leaves in the knothole? Why does the jury find Tom guilty? What role does Calpurnia play in the family and in the novel? Why is Dill an important character? What does Mrs. Dubose teach Scout and Jem? Why does Dolphus Raymond hide Coca-Cola in a brown paper bag? Why does Mayella Ewell lie on the witness stand? What qualities make Atticus a good father?
Scout realizes, too, that she, Jem, and Dill affected much of the same sorts of prejudices on Boo that Maycomb did on Tom Robinson. When she recognizes him, Scout sees that he couldn't possibly be capable of the rampant rumors she's always heard. And she's able to understand on a new level how some of Maycomb's residents feel about those who are on the fringes of society.
Heck Tate hoped that Atticus could free Tom; he's going to make sure that Arthur Radley is not put in the same situation: "'To my way of thinkin', Mr. Finch, taking the one man who's done you and this town a great service an' draggin' him. For the endless hours Atticus has devoted to teaching Jem and Scout about human nature, compassion, and responsibility, it is Scout who has to remind him that charging Boo Radley with murder would "'be sort of like shootin' a mockingbird.
At the beginning of the novel, Atticus engages Scout in a white lie about their reading together to keep her in school without unduly embarrassing Miss Caroline. Here, this lesson comes full circle when Scout reminds Atticus that the white lie about Ewell keeps the town safe without jeopardizing Boo Radley.
For all of Scout's resistance to "being a lady," she instinctively acts in the most ladylike way possible when Boo asks her to take him home: "I would lead him through our house, but I would never lead him home. Scout's maturity here is astounding for a child her age.
By upholding societal conventions in this instance, she's able to protect another's — a man's — pride and standing in the community. Scout may not like or agree with society's expectations of her, but she now understands that acting within those parameters is often a show of kindness and compassion.
Significantly, inside her home, Scout leads Boo; outside, she allows him to lead her. Scout recognizes that she can project a ladylike appearance on the outside while remaining true to herself and her own convictions on the inside. Later, Heck Tate shows Atticus a switchblade he claims to have taken from a drunk man that night.
The switchblade is evidence that the story he wants to tell —the story that saves Boo from daunting public scrutiny—isn't true, so he fabricates a new origin for it. Boo Radley saves Jem and Scout and it is believed that he kills Ewell with the knife. Heck Tate, the sheriff, puts in the official report that Bob Ewell fell on his own knife and died after lying under a tree for 45 minutes. Tate himself tells Atticus, To my way of thinkin', Mr.
Finch, taking the one man who's done you and this town a great service an' draggin' him with his shy ways into the limelight-- to me, that's a sin. It's a sin and I'm not about to have it on my head. Finch, there's just some kind of men you have to shoot before you can say hidy to 'em. Atticus misunderstands Heck Tate.
He thinks the man is trying to spare his son a trial. He tells Heck that he does not want to deny the truth. Atticus does not want to cover up his son stabbing and killing a man. Why does Heck Tate want to protect this person who killed Bob Ewell? Boo was defending the children because they couldn't defend themselves, so Heck Tate doesn't want to have Boo tried because Boo had a good intention.
The main reason Heck Tate hesitates in shooting the rabid dog, Tim Johnson, in To Kill a Mockingbird is because there is someone who can perform the job better next to him, and Heck doesn't want to miss and either cause the dog undue harm or scare it away, thereby leaving a rabid dog roaming the town.
Both Atticus and Heck are protecting Boo Radley from the horrors that he will suffer from a public trial. Even Heck will not allow this possibility--not over the death of someone as deserving of such a fate as Bob Ewell. The Gray Ghost represents Boo or better yet what the children imagined Boo to be. At the end of the book, Atticus see the copy of the book, and Scout asks him to read her the book during bedtime. Atticus refuses at first, as the book is scary, but Scout insists.
She says that she is not sacred. Atticus , deeply moved by this revelation, asks Scout if she understands. Scout assures him that she does , explaining that having it another way would be like shooting a mockingbird. Atticus looks at Scout with a sense of wonder, and thanks Boo for the lives of his children. In an attempt to protect Boo Radley from the public limelight in the wake of saving Jem and Scout's lives, Heck Tate covers up Boo's heroics by stating that Bob Ewell fell on his own knife and accidentally stabbed himself.
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