Sunday, December 1, 2019
To Kill A Mockingbird - Who Is The Most Guilty Essays -
  To Kill A Mockingbird - Who Is The Most Guilty    To    Kill A Mockingbird - Who Is The Most Guilty    Who is the most guilty? Review the involvement's  of the characters in the novel and evaluate weather or not they were guilty,  and if so how guilty?    In the classic novel ?To Kill A Mockingbird'  by Harper Lee there is an abundance of characters that could be proclaimed  to be the guilty party, but who is truly the guiltiest one of all? The  definition of guilt is as follows; the state of having done something wrong  or committed an offense; a feeling of self-reproach from believing that  one has done something wrong. My job is to examine the characters closely  and determine who is the most guilty in the involvement's of Tom Robinson's  prosecution, conviction and ultimately his death.    As I stated, there is an abundance of characters  that could be guilty, from Mayella and Bob Ewell, Heck Tate, to the jurors  and Atticus Finch. All of these characters play a roll in the story, and  a roll in the events that happened to Tom Robinson.    The story is an interesting one, but guilty  parties are found throughout. The story is set against the background of  nineteen thirties Southern life. The Finches are a family that once ran  a large, successful plantation. Their ancestors had been aristocratic ladies  and gentlemen of the south. Now they are reduced to gentle poverty. Atticus  and his family live in a town named Maycomb, he is a career layer. He has  a son named Jeremy and a daughter named Jean-Louse. They also have a cook  named Calpernia, she is a Negro but they respect her greatly. Racism in    Maycomb is evident almost where ever you look, and Negro peoples don't  have a chance to succeed.    A family that played a huge roll in the  novel are named the Ewells. They live on the out skirts of town by the  dump, near the Negro dwellings. The family consists of Bob, whom has a  daughter named Mayella and several other siblings. In the context of the  book, they are seen as no better than the Negro's. There is a sheriff named    Heck Tate, he is the one and only police officer in the small town, and  a judge named Taylor, who in the end hands down Tom's punishment.    To Kill A Mockingbird deals with many primal  and basic lessons in human nature. The book expresses many issues that  affect people throughout there lives. The novel deals with what you feel  inside, and I think that some of the characters, or at least, they should  be feeling guilt inside.    Atticus seems to be a great guy, and a  pretty good layer also but he too played a roll in the events that happened  to Tom Robinson. Although he did try his best, he was beat before he started...and  he knew this. Atticus fought vigorously for him, but failed. Tom was convicted  on the charges of rape and Atticus said to him that he would try an appeal,  and told him to sit tight. When Tom had been sent to a jail, he was scared  for his life and tried to make a run for it, he attempted to scale a large  fence. He would have made it if only for the fact that his arm lay dead  at his side. He was shot seventeen times in the process. Atticus felt guilty,  he was not able to convince Tom that things would work out for him. He  failed at letting Tom know that he could be free.    The jurors are the single most important  people in the court room, and having a clear mind of all prejudices needs  to be preset. In this case it was not. The jurors virtually held Tom's  life in their hot little hands, and in their prejudicial ways crushed it  without thinking twice. The members of the jurors are undoubtedly guilty  because of the simple fact that there was no hard evidence that Tom did  it, rape Mayella. The jurors should have reviewed the evidence with utter  most care, it almost clearly pointed to Bob Ewell as the abuser simply  for the fact that a right handed person would have beaten her up. Thus  impossible for Tom because his arm lay useless at his side. The evidence  was clear, no doctor was brought to the scene to examine Mayella, clearly  indicating that something was up, clearly indicating that she was in fact  not raped by Tom. The jurors are guilty for the simple fact that they convicted  an    
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