"Until you think things from his point of view ... you really do not know a person ... until you walk into the skin and walk around" (Lee 20), a moving book character, Atticus Finch, Harper Lee's To I mentioned in Kill. Robin This simple quote was used by Attikas to help her daughter and hero scouts get rid of her unhappy first day at school. But now, for that potential practical application, the phrase is one of the most famous book quotes. The scout may need to walk around Robert E's skin.
Bob Ewell is a character of Harper Lee's novel "Mockingbirds are killed". Bob Ewell is the head of the Ewel family, a poor family living in municipal garbage dumps. Bob Ewell has many children, but his wife died. Bob Ewell's racist attitude, shamelessness and revenge make him one of the most annoying and evil person in the book. Except for black resident, the racist in the town thinks it is worse than anyone else. Bob Ewell is one of these racists, and in the whole novel he shows that he thinks he is better than any blacks. He showed racist attitudes many times in court. For example, Bob Ewell did not mention the name of Tom Robinson, but said, "I saw a black black nigga to my majors!"
Harper Lee's "To kill Mockingbirds" talks about American racial discrimination and narrow ideas of the 1930s. The "kill Robin" character forms an integral part of their influence, including the opponent Bob Ewell. In literature, the opponent is a personality, power or concept that creates a conflict that the hero needs to deal with. There are two main characters in "Killing a robin". It is a narrator's scout and Attickies of her father, a local lawyer. As an opponent, Bob Ewell condemned black Tom Robinson with malice and raped his daughter. At the end of the story Ewel attacked the scout and her brother with a knife and made him an adversary against the scout. In a broader sense Ewell represents the negative side of the then southern society.