Table of Contents
- 1 What does Jem say about the Indian head they find in the knot hole of the tree?
- 2 What was the last thing the children found in the knot hole?
- 3 What do Jem and Scout find in the secret knot hole in the Radley oak on their way home from school what is ironic about it?
- 4 Why is Jem crying at the end of Chapter 7?
- 5 What did Scout find in the Knot Hole?
- 6 What really motivated Mr Radley to cover up the hole explain?
What does Jem say about the Indian head they find in the knot hole of the tree?
After Jem decides what to do with the pennies, he tells his sister that the Indian-head pennies are magical. Jem believes that they are good luck and possess “real strong magic.” In Jem’s mind, he believes that the Indian-head pennies have the power to give their owners good health and a long life.
What was the last thing the children found in the knot hole?
Scout finds the first gift, a stick of gum, which she helps herself to; later she will tell Jem that she found it in the tree. Next, two Indian head pennies appear, followed by a ball of twine, two hand carved figures that look like Jem and Scout, a medal, and finally a pocket-watch and a pocket knife.
What do Jem and Scout find in the secret knot hole in the Radley oak on their way home from school what is ironic about it?
The first item that Scout finds in the knothole is two sticks of Wrigley’s Double Mint chewing gum. Jem reprimands Scout for eating the gum because he thinks it might poison her, which it does not. They then find two polished Indian head pennies that Jem considers valuable and able to give people good luck.
What do they find out happened to the knot in the tree who did it and what was his reasoning for doing it?
When Nathan Radley fills the knot hole in the tree with cement, he says that it is because the tree is sick. Radley is telling the truth when he says that he did it because the tree was sick. Cement would not be very likely to help a tree stop being sick. In addition, Atticus tells Jem that the tree was not sick.
What does Jem say about the Indian heads?
“Well, Indian-heads—well, they come from the Indians. They’re real strong magic, they make you have good luck. Not like fried chicken when you’re not lookin’ for it, but things like long life ‘n’ good health, ‘n’ passin’ six-weeks tests… these are real valuable to somebody.
Why is Jem crying at the end of Chapter 7?
Jem cries at the end of chapter 7 because he realizes that his chances of communicating with Boo Radley and developing a lasting friendship are gone. Boo Radley has been leaving small gifts in the knothole of the tree as a way to communicate with the Finch children and spark a unique friendship.
What did Scout find in the Knot Hole?
Scout reaches into the knothole and discovers two pieces of chewing gum. She chews both pieces and tells Jem about it. He panics and makes her spit it out. On the last day of school, however, they find two old “Indian-head” pennies hidden in the same knothole where Scout found the gum and decide to keep them.
What really motivated Mr Radley to cover up the hole explain?
Why does Mr. Nathan Radley put cement in the knothole? He covered it with cement because the “tree was dying”, but really it was to stop Jem and Scout from putting things in it. Jem cries because Nathan Radley cements the hole which limits the connection with Boo Radley.
What is the significance of the gifts Boo Radley leaves in the knothole?
The small gifts in the knothole of the tree are significant because they represent Boo Radley’s benevolence, identify him as a compassionate neighbor, and reveal his attempt to form a friendship with the Finch children.