Moore
English 1
2-25-13
All about Scout Finch As people grow in life, they mature and change in many different ways. Harper Lee is the author of To Kill a Mocking Bird. This book is about Scout Finch and her life in the 1930’s in Maycomb County, Alabama. Harpe, shows how Scout matures and progresses in this book along with many other things. For example Scout, the main character, realizes her town is racist after the Tom Robinson trial. Harper also informs the reader about things Scout does not understand throughout the book. One of the things she demonstrates is the reason why Jem, Scout’s brother, is acting different. She does not know what people act like at that age because she is a lot younger, so all of his behavior is new to her. One of the other examples Harper shows is the very unique relationship between Miss Caroline, Scout’s teacher, and Scout. They would like each other, but Miss Caroline’s teaching strategy is bad for Scout because she is able read. Just like a lot of kids her age, Scout starts to mature a lot. When Jem says it was Miss Caroline’s new way of teaching kids (by reading later on), Scout replies, “I contented myself with asking Jem if he’d lost his mind”(24). In this quote Scout is acting mature, because instead of just yelling at Jem, like a little kid would do, she made herself calm and talked with him. In another quote in which Scout is showing her maturity is when Scout realizes Miss Caroline is mad at her for being able to read. Scout says, “I knew I had annoyed Miss Caroline, so I let well enough alone out the window until recess”(23). Yet again Scout is maturing by being smart and wise enough to tell when someone is mad at her. On the other hand Scout is sometimes immature. For instance when Walter Cunningham came over for dinner Scout rudely exclaims, “ Walter poured on his vegetables and meat with a generous hand … what in the sam hill was he doing”(32). She is showing immaturity in this part of the novel,