Bob Ewell’s 19-year-old daughter. She’s described as thick and used to hard labor and cultivates bright red geraniums in the family’s yard. and Scout can tell that though Mayella tries to keep clean, she’s regularly unsuccessful. The oldest child in her family, it falls to her to care for the younger children. She accuses Tom Robinson of beating and sexually abusing her, though Atticus, through his questioning of her and of Robinson, shows that Mayella was unloved, abused, starved for attention. It’s clear that she was actually beaten by her father when he caught her forcibly touching Robinson and was not sexually abused at all—though it’s heavily implied that Mr. Ewell has, in fact, sexually abused Mayella in the past. Though Mayella comes close to admitting that Mr. Ewell beats her when he drinks, she refuses to change her testimony and admit that she accused Robinson of sexual abuse, so that she can escape the fact that she broke an important social code as a white woman tempting a black man.
Mayella Ewell.
Mayella's full name is Mayella Violet Ewell.
Mayella Ewell
Bob Ewell, who is Mayella's father, beat her up
Mr. Ewell and Mayella claimed that Tom Robinson beat and raped Mayella. The truth is that Mayella threw herself at Tom and Bob Ewell caught her and beat her.
No, Mayella Ewell is 19-and-a-half-years-old in To Kill a Mockingbird.
Mayella is 19 1/2 years old when she is questioned by Atticus during the court hearing.
Bob Ewell is a character in the novel "To Kill a Mockingbird" by Harper Lee. He is the father of Mayella Ewell and a racist member of the community who brings about false accusations against Tom Robinson. Miss Caroline is shocked when she discovers that Bob Ewell's daughter, Mayella, is unable to read or write.
Bob Ewell is portrayed as a dishonest, racist, and abusive person in "To Kill a Mockingbird." He is the father of Mayella Ewell, the young woman who accuses Tom Robinson of assaulting her. Bob Ewell is shown to be a character who prioritizes his own interests over the well-being of others.
Tom Robinson testifies that Bob Ewell, Mayella's father, was the one who harmed her.
Mayella Ewell is introduced in Chapter 17 of 'To Kill a Mockingbird' by Harper Lee.
Mayella Ewell only completed the third grade in school before stopping her education.