Wednesday, December 12, 2012

What does Mr. Underwood think about Tom’s death?

In Chapter 25, Scout elaborates on Braxton Bragg Underwood's editorial in The Maycomb Tribune concerning Tom Robinson's death. Although Mr. Underwood is a racist, he considers it a sin to kill cripples. Scout says he likened Tom's death to the senseless killing of songbirds. As Scout reads Mr. Underwood's article, she realizes that Tom was a dead man before he set foot in court. Mr. Underwood understands that Tom Robinson was an innocent, crippled man who became a victim of racial injustice. He doesn't believe Tom should have died and is disgusted that the prison guards murdered a crippled man. Scout mentions that the majority of Maycomb's citizens read Braxton's article and believed he was simply trying to be poetic enough to get a reprint in The Montgomery Advertiser.

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