Mayella Ewell is hesitant and anxious when she is asked questions, often avoiding eye contact and stuttering in her responses. She tends to become defensive and agitated when pressed for details or confronted with uncomfortable truths.
Miss Mayella implies a level of respect and formality that Mayella Ewell, a character from "To Kill a Mockingbird," was not accustomed to receiving. As a member of the poor and disrespected Ewell family in Maycomb, she may have felt uncomfortable and out of place being addressed in such a formal manner.
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.
Atticus suggested that Mayella Ewell was likely injured by someone left-handed based on the bruises on her face. He believed it was her father, Bob Ewell, who was left-handed and had a history of being abusive towards his daughter.
Mayella Ewell in "To Kill a Mockingbird" is not portrayed as a reliable witness due to her inconsistencies in her testimony and her obvious bias. She is vulnerable and manipulated by her father, Bob Ewell, and her own actions during the trial suggest she is not being truthful.
Bob Ewell is a character from the book "To Kill a Mockingbird" by Harper Lee. He didn't get fired in the story; he was a poor and abusive father to Mayella Ewell. Bob Ewell was involved in the trial of Tom Robinson, where he accused Tom of assaulting his daughter, Mayella, despite lacking evidence.
Mayella as in from the book 'To kill a mocking bird' by Harper Lee'? If so, the book suggests that her father was quite incestual (?) and had sex with his daughter. She gives this away at the trial of Tom in court when he was convicted of raping her. Tut tut.
Mayella indicated that she asked Tom to help her break apart a piece of furniture that was outside. She went inside to get him a nickel, and he snuck up behind her, grabbed her around the neck, hit her repeatedly, and then raped her. She kicked and screamed and then her dad was there yelling at her and she fainted. Tom's testimony is a bit different. He said that he had broken up the piece of furniture over a year ago, and she had offered to pay him a nickel, but he had refused and gone home. On the actual night in question, Tom said that she asked him inside the house, and told him that there was a door he needed to fix. So he went in and tried the door, which didn't need any fixing, and Mayella shut the door. He asked her where everyone else was, and she said the kids went in town for ice-cream. Then she asked him to get something that was on top of the chiffarobe, so he got on the chair to reach it, and she grabbed him around the legs, knocking the chair over. Then she jumped on him, hugging him, kissed him, told him that she never kissed a grown man before and that "what her papa do to her down't count." He shoved her away, and that is when Bob Ewell came on the scene. Mayella's testimony puts her as being attacked and raped by Tom, and Tom's testimony puts her as scheming to get them alone together, and trying to seduce him. The differences are stark, and highly significant.
Mayella Ewell is a victim of her circumstances due to her abusive upbringing and lack of support. However, her false accusation against Tom Robinson reveals her villainous actions when she chooses to protect herself at the expense of an innocent man's life.
because it proves that Tom Robinson is innocent and it Bob Ewell was lying the whole time
The audience sees that Bob Ewell is left-handed when Mr. Gilmer asks him if he is ambidextrous. Bob Ewell confirms that he uses his left hand for most things, like signing his name. This detail becomes important later in the trial as it points to Bob Ewell being the likely assailant in the attack on Mayella Ewell.
"she says she never kissed a grown man before an' she might as well kiss a n*gger. She says what her papa do to her don't count." quote from Tom Robinson when he is being questioned in court. This suggests she is sexually abused by her father (Bob Ewell) but it doesn't mention it anywhere else in the book.
Mayella is becoming frustrated because she knows that it was her fault but she won't admit it. She is ashamed that she did this and is becoming mad because Atticus knows it. She thinks she is being ridiculed, teased, and abused, though Atticus is only asking good questions.