Why Is Atticus Finch Important In To Kill A Mockingbird

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In a small town in Alabama, there is one family who can change the way of the town for good, that family is the Finches. Their maturity throughout the book, To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, is impeccable, which really gets you emotionally connected to the characters in outstanding ways. But one of the Finches truly holds his place in the town, and that is Atticus Finch. His role in the book isn't helping the children find out who they are, but to help the town create a less racial atmosphere. Fond of symbols, Harper Lee has helped me discover one that truly represents Atticus marvelously. Symbols can range from animals to color, one of each represents him astonishingly. But To Kill a Mockingbird would definitely not be the book it is known …show more content…

In chapter 15, a couple of weeks before the trial, Atticus goes over to the Jailhouse to sit in front of Tom Robinson’s cell reading the newspaper. Late into the night a group of men come to where Atticus is with guns in hand. Then Jem and Scout appear in front of the crowd and join their father cowering behind him. . If the children didn’t appear, the crowd of men would have probably been barbaric if they did not get what they came for, Tom Robinson dead. Atticus would not let that happen because he knew that Tom was innocent. When Judge Taylor assigns Atticus the Tom Robinson case in chapter 9, Atticus, regardless, he knows there will be consequences for this, tries his hardest to prove Tom innocent. Atticus is not a noble character because he is rich or famous, he is noble for what he does. His persistence helps him to never give up fighting for what’s right and even if he fails the first time, he is willing to continue, but he comes back with more strength and facts to prove the defendant innocent. In the trial in chapter 16 and 17, albeit Atticus losses, he doesn't want to end it there, he continues with his faith and is willing to fight for parole for Tom Robinson. Atticus was verbally attacked for defending a colored man, but he didn’t care because he knew he was doing the right …show more content…

Its calm demeanor is so reassuring to see, in the sky, in the ocean and in the moon if you look at it just right. The citizens of Maycomb probably felt the same thing when they saw Atticus in public. The color blue has a few different meanings, confidence, depth and stability. After the trial concluded and Atticus received the bad news, he didn’t let that stop him from continuing to push on. Despite him losing the trial, he had confidence in himself that he could persuade the jury as well as the judge to allow Tom Robinson another shot. Atticus knew that Tom Robinson was innocent, but he also knew it would be hard for a white jury to set a colored man free rather than a white man, even one that the bottom of the social list. Towards the end of the book, Scout and Jem were walking back from the carnival, then they got attacked by an unknown figure, it’s dark, so they can't see what's happening and then Scout finds out that Jem is out cold. Another silhouette roaming among the darkness finds the children, then picks up Jem, taking him back to his house. Atticus calls the doctor who comes to the conclusion that Jem got knocked out, but they need him to sleep until morning so the doctor gave him medicine to do so. While this is happening Atticus is staying very calm and has depth and stability. Another time Atticus stayed calm was the encounter with Bob