Tkam - Don’t Harm a Mockingbird
By: regina • Essay • 576 Words • December 14, 2009 • 1,156 Views
Essay title: Tkam - Don’t Harm a Mockingbird
Don’t Harm a Mockingbird
My brother was once accused of creating artwork with harmful intentions towards his art teacher. He had to go to court, and it is now permanently in his records. He was innocent and was harmed by the evil misconception of his art teacher. In To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee, the death of a mockingbird is used as a symbol to portray the harm of an innocent person. Tom Robinson’s death can be seen as the death of a mockingbird because though proven guilty he was truly innocent. Jem and Scout also symbolize a songbird, a finch, and are harmed by the atrociousness of Bob Ewell. Another “mockingbird” of the book would be Boo Radley, who was not harmed by evil but came awfully close to it.
Tom Robinson was an innocent, harmless man who was killed by the pure evil of prejudice. During the trial Tom Robinson said, “‘Yes, suh. I felt right sorry for her, she seemed to try more’n the rest of them’” (Lee 197). Tom felt sorry for Mayella and all he wanted to do was help and befriend her. He was happily married and had no wrong intentions whatsoever towards Mayella Ewell. Despite that Tom was proven innocent he was still announced guilty, because the people of Maycomb couldn’t bare to let a colored man be proven innocent. After Tom’s death Mr. Underwood said, ‘“he likened Tom’s death to the senseless slaughter of songbirds”’(241). When Tom Robinson tried to escape he was shot twenty-seven times. A logical thought for an authority to take care of a person trying to escape would be to shoot him once to get him down and if he doesn’t go down try it again but only one more time. It is not logical for an authority to shoot the convict twenty-seven times. Tom was brutally shot and killed for doing nothing but trying to help a girl without friends. It was the death of a mockingbird.
Jem and Scout with the