Comparing Courage And Cowardice In To Kill A Mockingbird By Harper Lee

1131 Words3 Pages

“The extent of one’s courage cannot be measured in ordinary times. All is revealed when something happens” - Ben Horowitz. Every day, we encounter uncomfortable situations; however, the difference in how one interprets and responds to the situation determines one's courage. In these situations, the courageous option might seem the most cowardice; sometimes the most cowardice option might seem the most courageous; however, the ability to take the courageous option is what sets the courageous apart from the cowardice. Throughout the novel To Kill a Mockingbird, Harper Lee develops character foils to demonstrate to Jem and Scout the difference between courage and cowardice! The difference between how people handle uncomfortable situations separates …show more content…

On his daily trek to work, Tom Robinson, a black man, passes the Ewell property. For months before the trial, Mayella Ewell would ask Tom for help with a task. Though he was a black man and Mayella was a white woman, Tom complied because he knew she had nobody to help him. However, during the trial, the prosecutor, Mr. Gilmer, questioned his intentions, “Were you paid for your services....no suh...I was glad to do it, Mr. Ewell didn't seem to help her none, and neither did the chillun, and I know she didn't have no nickels to spare” (CHAPTER 19). During the period in which the novel takes place, racism and racial hierarchies were prominent– especially in the south (To Kill a Mockingbird takes place in Alabama). In society, interracial couples were prohibited; punishments for the black folk involved were great. Even suspicion of being involved in an interracial relationship could lead to death. Being a black man and Mayella being a white woman, Tom could have easily refused to help in fear of being punished; however Tom Robinson put his fears aside to help a woman in need. In contrast to Tom subsiding his fears, Mayella acted on her

Open Document