To Kill A Moking Bird
Do Not Judge A Person Until You Get To Know Them “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,” these are the words spoken by Atticus Finch when giving advice to his little girl, Jean Louise, “Scout.” This theme, “do not judge a person before you get to know them,” is something most children, during this day and age, are taught when they are very young, and is the reoccurring theme in To Kill A Mocking Bird. The two clear examples of this theme are with Arthur “Boo” Radley and Tom Robinson. When the characters are first met, they are introduced as bad and maybe even evil people. However, when the characters start to develop, it can be noticed that they are actually good people. In To Kill A Mocking Bird, from the time Arthur “Boo” Radley was a small boy until the time he was a grown adult he was a very misunderstood character. When the children of Maycomb, like Jem and Scout, were young, people would tell horror stories about Boo. One of them was when Boo allegedly stabbed his father with scissors, but throughout the book, it was foreshadowed that Boo really was not a ba
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Some common words found in the essay are:
Tom Robinson, Bob Ewell’s, Robinson Arthur, Jem Scout, Boo Boo, Walk Moons, Ewell Finch, Tom Robinson’s, Jean Louise, Judge Person, tom robinson, “do judge, “do judge people, found guilty, walk moons, kill mockingbird, kill mocking, arthur “boo”, “boo” radley, judge people them”, people them”, arthur “boo” radley, tom robinson’s, theme “do judge, theme walk moons,
Approximate Word count = 873
Approximate Pages = 3 (250 words per page double spaced)
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