Table of Contents
- 1 What is significant about Scout and Boo walking back to his house and Scout looking out on his porch?
- 2 What was Scout’s fantasy regarding boo?
- 3 How was Scout’s reaction to meeting Boo at the end of the novel ironic?
- 4 Who is Boo Radley in to kill a Mockingbird?
- 5 What happens at the end of to kill a Mockingbird?
What is significant about Scout and Boo walking back to his house and Scout looking out on his porch?
After she walks him home, Scout stands on Boo’s porch and imagines many of the events of the story (Atticus shooting the mad dog, the children finding Boo’s presents in the oak tree) as they must have looked to Boo. She at last realizes the love and protection that he has silently offered her and Jem all along.
What transformation occurs when Scout walks Boo Radley home at the end of the novel?
A New Perspective When Scout walks Boo Radley home, she’s entering into territory she’s seen all her life but never before set foot on. Turning to leave, she sees her familiar neighborhood from a new perspective—Boo’s perspective.
What does Scout think of Boo Radley at the end of the book?
Scout is describing Boo Radley at the end of the novel when she sees him for the first time. Words like “khaki,” “gray,” “delicate,” and “thin” all reflect how physically unimposing and nonthreatening Boo actually is, as compared to the monstrous form that Boo took in the Finch children’s imagination.
What was Scout’s fantasy regarding boo?
What was Scout’s fantasy regarding Arthur (Boo) Radley? She daydreamed that Boo would be sitting in the swing and they would chat as if they had chatted every day for all their lives. She wanted him to be “normal” like everyone else on the street.
How does Scout relate to Boo Radley?
Scout finally meets Boo Radley at the close of the book, and she finds that he is soft-spoken and compassionate. Jem and Scout do not think of Boo Radley as an ethical person until the end of the book when they find that he is a well-intentioned young man.
What is the significance of Scout’s guiding boo through the house and then to his own home?
Scout makes it look like he is leading her, rather than she is leading him. That way if anyone happens to see them, Boo Radley will not seem vulnerable and it will not be obvious she is taking the shy man home. This demonstrates Scout’s maturity and ability to empathize.
How was Scout’s reaction to meeting Boo at the end of the novel ironic?
Scout then mentions that she would probably never see Boo anyway. Ironically, Scout does end up meeting Boo and sits with him on her front porch following Bob Ewell’s attack. In just a little more than two years, Scout has gone from fearing Boo as some kind of monster to fantasizing about meeting him one day.
What does Scout believe about Boo Radley now?
What is the symbolism of Scout’s reference to Arthur Radley’s feathery hair?
Why “feathery”? Because Arthur Radley is yet another “mockingbird” that it would be a sin to “kill.” Except in defense of Jem and Scout, Arthur Radley has never done anything to harm anyone.
Who is Boo Radley in to kill a Mockingbird?
Boo Radley is a white individual who never left his house because of the ways society viewed him. Tom Robinson was a black man who got framed of a crime that he did not do. In the book To Kill a Mockingbird…show more content… Second of all, Jew and Scout heard noises behind them walking home. Jem yells for Scout to start running.
How does Boo Radley ask scout to walk him home?
Boo (Arthur) Radley asks Scout to walk him home. She asks him to step down and raise his arm. Boo has to stoop down for Scout to reach him, but she puts her arm inside the crook of his arm and they walk to the Radley house in a genteel manner.
What is the significance of Boo Radley’s significance in the book?
Oh, this is the most marvellous significance in the book. If you remember, the very first that we’d heard of Boo in the book was him as a ‘malevolent phantom’ with the most arbitrary and grotesque imagery.
What happens at the end of to kill a Mockingbird?
At the end of the novel, after walking Arthur “Boo” Radley home, Scout looks out at the view of town from the Radley’s front porch. She notices just how much Boo could see just by looking out the window, since, being a recluse, was his only means of experiencing the world.