Examples Of Foreshadowing In To Kill A Mockingbird

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Sean Rielly
Miss Moore
Honors English II-2A
3 October 2015
Mockingbird

"This morning Mr. Bob Ewell stopped Atticus on the post office corner, spat in his face, and told him he’d get him if it took the rest of his life."(221) After humiliating Bob Ewell in court, Atticus is threatened by Bob, the town shame, in an attempt to get some dignity back; after his daughter Mayella was allegedly raped by a negro Tom Robinson and Atticus tries to pin the abuse on Bob instead of Tom. Although since Tom is African American the jury voted him guilty and he gets the death penalty, even though most believed him to be innocent. By analyzing Harper Lee’s use of foreshadowing in To Kill a Mockingbird: Bob Ewell threatens Atticus and says he'll get him, Boo …show more content…

Scout, Jem and Dill played games over the summer mocking Boo and what they thought he did. "Boo drove the scissors into his parent’s leg"(11) more than once the children did a play where they each were a member of the Radley household, and even stole some scissors from Calpurnia to reenact one of the false stories they heard about Boo. At the end of the book Boo saves the children and his true self is shown. Boo was not what the children thought him to be. His true self was foreshadowed throughout the book when he hid little presents in the tree, put the blanket on scout during the fire, or when Jem went back to get his pants and found them neatly folded on the fence. He was just a kind frail man whose major imperfection was being unsociable because of the way he was raised by his family. Boo as not a true psychopath, but Scout just was not mature enough yet to see his true self, not a child's wild impression.
Bob Ewell's threats and suspicious behavior after the trial foreshadowed his attack on the children. "This morning Mr. Bob Ewell stopped Atticus on the post office corner, spat in his face, and told him he’d get him if it took the rest of his life."(221) Atticus thought this was the end of Bob's rage toward him. Little did Atticus know that Bob had a bigger plan and went after Atticus's children.