The tree with the knothole is where Boo Radley hides little gifts for Jem and Scout
The young boys Jem and Scout found the knothole in the tree in the novel "To Kill a Mockingbird" by Harper Lee.
Boo Radley leaves gifts for the children in the knothole of the tree.
Nathan Radley, Boo's older brother
It is a hole in any piece of wood, for example, a hole in a tree in the novel, To Kill a Mockingbird.
It is not a species of tree- it is a tree that has a small hollow where a branch died. Where branches grow, it leaves a round marking in the grain of the wood- a "knot". If the knot falls out, you have a knothole.
U mean the one in the knothole of the tree? The clock and other stuffs in the knothole were the gifts presented to Scout and Jems anonymously by Boo Radley.
It happens in chapter 7. That's when Mr. Nathan Radley puts cement in the knothole.Mustache! :{)AHA
To show friendship to the children, Boo Radley left small gifts in a knothole of the tree. They were small, but with much meaning from Boo.
Scout finds gum in the knothole of the tree on page 33 of "To Kill a Mockingbird" by Harper Lee.
In "To Kill a Mockingbird," the knothole in the tree is cemented up by Nathan Radley, Boo Radley's brother, as a way to prevent Boo from communicating with the children. This action symbolizes the Radley family's attempt to isolate Boo from the outside world and maintain their reclusive lifestyle.
Nathan Radley, Boo Radley's brother filled the knothole with cement. When Jem and Scout asked him why he was doing this he told them that his tree was dying and filling the knothole with cement would keep it from dying. Scout and Jem went and asked Atticus if he thought the tree looked like it was dying and he said it looked perfectly healthy.
Boo Radley made the carvings of Scout and Jem.