Jump to content

echo74

Members
  • Posts

    713
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    2

echo74 last won the day on December 4 2025

echo74 had the most liked content!

About echo74

  • Birthday September 26

Profile Information

  • Member Title
    probably somewhere important
  • Pronouns
    she/her
  • Location
    somewhere over the rainbow
  • Interests
    Jesus, reading, writing, sleeping, procrastinating

echo74's Achievements

1.4k

Reputation

Single Status Update

See all updates by echo74

  1. so bc i go to a small private school there are exactly two english classes for the whole high school

    english

    and honors english

    anyways i've already read to kill a mockingbird but that's what we're doing this semester

    and we were talking abt who might represent mockingbirds

    and they were all like "oh boo radley, tom, scout, mayella ewell"

    and i was like

    "oh! the dog! the one with rabies" 👀👀

    before you think

    let me speak

    ok ima put this in a spoiler box bc it might be a lil long

    Spoiler

    ok so the metaphor of killing a mockingbird represents a loss of innocence and for scout thats shown through her slowly becoming aware of racism and other issues of the world

    right?

    and i was thinking about that

    and i was also thinking about the significance of the dog scene bc when i first read the book it didn't seem super relevant to me other than showing them that atticus could shoot?

    and i was also thinking about how tim johnson (the dog's name) sounds suspiciously like tom robinson (the guy that gets put on trial)

    both of them die in the end

    bc of something that, inevitably, they had no control over

    tom couldn't control the prejudices of the jury

    tim couldn't control the fact that he got rabies

    in the same way that tim was forced to have rabies

    tom was forced to suffer extreme discrimination

    and don't get me wrong i'm not against putting down rabid animals (which a few people were arguing with me abt)

    i think you should put them down

    but again going back to the metaphor/theme of to kill a mockingbird

    in the book it says that tim (the dog) was owned by whoever from whatever farm but he was maycomb's pet

    he was something everyone loved, something innocent

    forced to suffer something horrible, forced to swallow something bitter

    and eventually it becomes a shell of itself bc of the disease

    and dies

    he loses his innocence

    a dog, a pet is something that's supposed to be innocent

    and yet he became something scary

    something dangerous

    i was reading a webtoon the other day (i think it was space boy) and there was a quote that stood out to me that reminds me of this "fear paints ugly pictures of people"

    and i think that's absolutely true

    especially in tkam

    think of boo radley

    i wonder if you could also compare the dog with all the people who stood by even when it was obvious that tom was innocent

    instead of standing up for what they knew was right

    they sat and watched as an innocent man was put in jail for crimes he didn't commit

    racism and prejudice took over their minds, so to speak, and made them a shell of their former selves

    anyways this is all just to say i really liked the dog and i was really sad reading about it

    tldr: i really really like dogs

    1. Through The Living Glass

      Through The Living Glass

      dang okay

      I remember thinking that the dog represented racism when I read the book

      But that's a really interesting take on it

      I like that

    2. Bird Furious

      Bird Furious

      I’ve never read it 

      but dang thsts pretty darn thought out

    3. Through the Living Wrath

      Through the Living Wrath

      Huh

      I wish my school district actually taught English.

      I’ve read 2 full books (in the curriculum, don’t worry) from 7-10th grade.

      The 2nd I wouldn’t have read if my teacher hadn’t changed.

×
×
  • Create New...