The prosecutor, Mr.
Gilmer, questions Heck Tate, who recalls, on the night of November 21, Bob
Ewell urged him to go to the Ewell house and told him that his daughter Mayella
had been raped. When he got there he found Mayella bruised and beaten, and she
told him that Tom Robinson had raped her. Atticus cross-examines the witness,
who admits that no doctor was summoned and tells Atticus that Mayella’s bruises
were concentrated on the right side of her face. Tate leaves the stand and Bob
Ewell is called.
An extremely rude
little man, Ewell testifies that on the evening in question he was coming out
of the woods with a load of kindling when he heard his daughter yelling. When
he reached the house, he looked in the window and saw Tom Robinson raping her.
Robinson ran and Ewell went into the house, saw that his daughter was all
right, and ran for the sheriff. Atticus’s cross-examination is brief: he asks
Mr. Ewell why no doctor was called and then has the witness write his name. Bob
Ewell, the jury sees, is left-handed—and a left-handed man would be more likely
to leave bruises on the right side of her face.
Next is Mayella she says that she
called Tom Robinson inside the fence that evening and offered him a nickel to
break up a dresser for her, and that once he got inside the house he grabbed
her and took advantage of her. In Atticus’s cross-examination, Mayella reveals
that her life consists of seven unhelpful siblings, a drunken father, and no
friends. Atticus then examines her testimony and asks why she didn’t put up a
better fight why her screams didn’t bring the other children running, and most
important how Tom Robinson managed the crime: how he bruised the right side of
her face with his useless left hand, which was torn apart by a cotton gin when
he was a boy. Atticus pleads with Mayella to admit that there was no rape, that
her father beat her.
Tom testifies that he always passed the
Ewell house on the way to work and that Mayella often asked him to do chores
for her. On the evening in question he recalls she asked him to come inside the
house and fix a door. When he got inside there was nothing wrong with the door,
and he noticed that the other children were gone. Mayella told him she had
saved her money and sent them all to buy ice cream. Then she asked him to lift
a box down from a dresser. When Tom climbed on a chair, she grabbed his legs
scaring him so much that he jumped down. She then jumped on him and hugged him
around the waist then asked him to kiss her. As she struggled, her father
appeared at the window, calling Mayella a whore and threatening to kill her.
Tom Ran away.
Judge Taylor begins
to badger the witness, asking about his motives for always helping Mayella with
her chores, until Tom declares that he felt sorry for her. This statement puts
the courtroom ill at ease—in Maycomb, black people aren’t supposed to feel
sorry for a white person. Mr. Gilmer reviews Mayella’s testimony.
Then Atticus finished going over the
evidence and now makes a personal appeal to the jury. He points out that the
prosecution has produced no medical evidence of the crime and has presented
only the shaky testimony of two unreliable witnesses; moreover, the physical
evidence suggests that Bob Ewell, not Tom Robinson, beat Mayella.
And when they come back from the break
they take they tell us that Tom Robinson is guilty.