Analysis Of Boo Ridley's Character In To Kill A Mockingbird By Harper Lee

182 Words1 Pages
What happens now could drastically affect the future. Boo Ridley is shunned for hanging around the Cunninghams although they “did little, but enough to be discussed by the town.” Eventually he had “resisted arrest [from] Maycomb’s ancient beadle…,” and instead of being sent to state industrial school, he was pulled away from society. After 20 years the grudge should had been let go, but what Boo did was unorthodox to the people of Maycomb, it permanently discarded him as a person. The experiences of Boo warns the children that the world will always remember, and hold actions against people. Alongside decades of absence, the citizens of Maycomb had created superstitions that he was a “malevolent phantom,” and that he kidnapped children.