He sees mayella trying to get with Tom Robinson.
Mr. Ewell arrived on the scene to find his daughter Mayella interacting with Tom Robinson in a way that he perceived as disrespectful or inappropriate. This sight infuriated him, fueling his anger and leading to the events that followed.
niggerrr
He sees mayella trying to get with Tom Robinson.
Preparation for the stage
Atticus asks Mr. Ewell to write his name to compare his handwriting to the note left at the scene of the crime. By doing this, Atticus can determine if Mr. Ewell wrote the note, which could help prove his innocence or guilt in the case.
See the Web Link to the left for the answer.
'I see you' final scene with Jake, Sweet_Daisyy, and Neytiri
the whole scene
Scene
If you mean scene like a move scene it isn't a verb therefore there is no past tense. If you mean seen it would be saw. To see I see the light I saw the light last night I will see the light tomorrow I will see, I see, I saw and I have seen.
gggs... dont use wiki....use enotes especially if u want answers to questions from a book
We know Atticus has followed his own advice and understood Bob Ewell's perspective because he approaches the trial with empathy and tries to see things from Bob's point of view. Atticus defends Tom Robinson with compassion and even shows concern for Bob Ewell's well-being despite their differences. His actions demonstrate that he has tried to empathize with Bob Ewell's circumstances.
In the "Revenge" scene where Wallace kills the Sherrif.
they can scence it