Tom And Points example essay topic
Tom said it was nice of her. She then asked him to climb on a chair and get something from atop a cupboard, and she then hugged him around the waist, and asked him to kiss her, saying that she had never kissed a man before and it might as well be a black man. When her father, Mr. Bob Ewell appeared at the door and called her a whore-lady, Tom fled. Tom's employer, Mr. Link Deas, stands up for Tom halfway through thr trial.
He does this by getting up from his seat and shouting that Tom had been under his employment for eight years and he had never been any trouble. Judge Taylor sends Mr. Deas out of the room for this. The prosecutor, Mr. Gilmer, cross-examines Tom and points out that Tom had a criminal record and he even makes Tom say with his own words that he was strong enough to hold a woman down and rape her, even though he had but one hand. Mr. Gilmer continues to harass Tom on why he helped Mayella with her chores, until Tom admits that he felt sorry for Mayella. When Tom realized his mistake (That he was a black man and black people, in Maycomb's society, did not feel sorry for the white people. It was usually the other way round. ), he 'shifted uncomfortably ' in his seat.
Mr. Gilmer then accuses Tom of lying about everything he said, comparing it with Mayella's testimony. This is when Dill begins to cry and Scout and Dill go outside the courtroom. setting-Chapter 19 takes place in the courtroom. the atmosphere in the courtroom is tense and quiet, other than the trial itself. Since it takes place in a courtroom, it is quite solemn and focuses on the actual trial rather than the reactions of the spectators. The spectators are paying close attention to every move of the people in front of them, as stated in the line 'Judge Taylor instinctively reached for his gavel, but let it fall. The murmur below us died without his help. ' This is quite unusual for the people of Maycomb, as Maycomb was quite a lazy and carefree town.
Thus, the setting of the courtroom is parallel to the setting of the town outside the courtroom. This is stated in the line, ' there was no hurry, for there was nowhere to go, nothing to buy and no money to buy it with, nothing to see outside the boundaries of Maycomb county. ' on page 11. The setting was also rather harsh, as the way Mr. Gilmer questions Tom is quite accusing and stabbing. In fact, it was accusing to such a large extent that it made Dill cry. It was also sympathetic, as in page 198; it states that the Ewell were poor, as 'Maycomb gave those Christmas baskets, welfare money, and the back of its hand. ' On page 203, where Tom Robinson says that the reason why he helped Mayella all this while was that he felt sorry for her, the setting is quite uncomfortable, as it says ' The witness realized his mistake and shifted uncomfortably in his chair.
' At the end of chapter 19, when Dill starts to cry and Scout takes him outside the courtroom, we can sense a distinct change in the setting to a more relaxed and less tense one. Although they were quite wary of Mr. Dolphus Raymond, as scout says that he 'was an evil man'. When the children find out the truth about Mr. Dolphus Raymond, and that he drinks coca-cola under the pretense of being a drunkard. This makes the setting more light-hearted but it quickly changes to a more serious tone, when Mr. Raymond says why he pretends that he is a bad man and that he drinks alcohol. It also makes the reader think about the social prejudice of Maycomb that judges people who are slightly different from the 'norm'. when Dill and Scout go back to the courtroom, the situation is, as they find, less tense and more surprising. on Page 209, when Atticus ' did something (Scout) never saw him do, in public or in private: he unbuttoned his vest, unbuttoned his collar, loosed his tie, and took off his coat'. Although Harper Lee injects a bit of humour here by saying that ' this was the equivalent of him standing before (scout and Jem) stark naked. ', the reader can sense the increasing nervousness, that led even Atticus to lose a few layers of clothing, probably because he was sweating due to the tense atmosphere.
Another example of the nervousness Atticus was feeling is the line ' Atticus paused and took out his handkerchief. Then he took out his glasses and wiped them and we saw another 'first': we had never seen him sweat- he was one of those men who never perspired, but now it was a shining tan. ' During Atticus's peach, he sounds, on several instances, pleading and persuasive, and one might even say, desperate on some points. One can see that he strongly opposes the opposition, as his language is extremely strong. An example of this is the line ' Which, gentlemen, we know is in itself a lie as black as Tom Robsinson's skin, a lie I do not have to point out to you. '.