Boo Radley, for instance, is like a mockingbird—just as mockingbirds do not harm people but only “sing their hearts out for us,” Boo does not harm anyone; instead, he leaves Jem and Scout presents, covers Scout with a blanket during the fire, and eventually saves the children from Bob Ewell. Despite the pureness of his heart, however, Boo has been damaged by an abusive father. The connection between songbirds and innocents is made explicitly several times in the book: in Chapter 25, Mr. Underwood likens Tom Robinson’s death to “the senseless slaughter of songbirds by hunters and children”; in Chapter 30, Scout tells Atticus that hurting Boo Radley would be “sort of like shootin’ a mockingbird.” The moral imperative to protect the vulnerable governs Atticus’s decision to take Tom’s case, just as it leads Jem to protect the roly-poly bug from Scout’s…
“‘Well, Dill, after all he’s just a Negro.’ ‘I don’t care one speck. It ain’t right somehow it ain’t right to do ‘em that way. Hasn’t anybody got any business talkin’ like that-it just makes me sick,’”(Lee, 266). In the novel To Kill A Mockingbird author Harper Lee lays out the story of the Finch family consisting of two siblings, Jem and Scout, along with their widowed father Atticus. This family is faced with a tough break when Atticus get appointed a case to defend an African American (Tom Robinson) in the time of extreme discrimination. Growing up shapes and builds minds to what will fully become of them in future years even though there may be obstacles to endeavor through the process.…
In the book To Kill a Mockingbird written by Harper Lee, one of the main characters is Atticus Finch. He is a highly looked upon lawyer in the small town of Maycomb county. He has two children, Jem and Jean Louise Finch. Atticus has a unique way of parenting his kids that some people do not approve of. He often gets criticized on how he raises his kids. Atticus Finch has flaws but, he is a respectable character within the book.…
“I speak to everyone in the same way, whether he is the garbage man or the president of the university” - (Albert Einstein). These words reflect the way Atticus Finch, protagonist, attorney, and father in Harper Lee’s novel To Kill a Mockingbird, lives his life. There is no difference to him in regards to race, social status, or gender. Atticus Finch is an admirable gentleman who demonstrates intelligence and respectfulness throughout the Tom Robinson trial and his interactions with people who despised the fact that he was taking the case. He strongly believes in respect for people of color and passes his belief down to his children by taking the Tom Robinson case. Although he is at times too trusting of people, his words and actions continue to prove to his children and community how a real gentleman behaves.…
In the book To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, Atticus Finch is a small town lawyer and a single parent raising two children. Atticus is a strong, intelligent, white male in his forties. He was raised in a Christian home and believes in treaty people fairly and with respect. Even though Atticus is a lawyer, he does not make much money in the town that he lives. He is not necessarily poor but he does not have much money either. His life revolves around his children and he loves them dearly. Atticus teaches his children many valuable lessons by treating them with respect and talking to them in a stern yet loving voice. He speaks to his children as if they were adults. He will honestly answer any question his children have. Atticus teaches his children about life and how to deal with problems they face in their community.…
Children are impressionable. However, important people in their lives, such as a father or neighbor, can help them mature and grow into a respected adult. In the novel, To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, several adults, such as Atticus and Miss Maudie provide moral guidance to Jem and Scout, hereby teaching them many lessons such as: to always respect others and to have courage. One important lesson Jem and Scout learn is that it is a sin to kill a mockingbird. A mockingbird is a bird that does no harm to humans, its only purpose is singing. It is a sin to kill a mockingbird because it has no negative impact on humans; therefore there is no reason in killing it. This was an important lesson taught by Atticus to his children, Jem and Scout, that allowed their morality to grow from…
Atticus FInch is a Lawyer and a wise and caring father. Atticus Teaches his Children Jem and Scout to be kind to all sorts of people no matter their race. Atticus also teaches his children not to “kill a mockingbird”. Atticus acts on what the says and commits to the rules and principles he sets for his children. As a lawyer and do to the time period that this book is set in which is the 1930s Atticus sees his fair share of racism.…
As a father, atticus is affectionaye with his children, Jem and Scout. He’s ready with a hug when the need comfort and available to pend time reading to thm. Although he lets his kids the freedom to play and explore, hehas a firm hand always teaching his children to think of how their actions affect others and making punishments to teach hi children valuable lessons. “when child asks you something, answer them, for goodness ske. But don’t make a production of it. Children are children, but they can spot an evasion faster than adults, and evason simly muddles ‘em” (116). In this quote at the moment Atticus is talking to Uncle Jack. Its was Christmas and Scout started saying some bad word and doesn’t know the meaning to, but when she asks what a whore-lady means Uncle Jack told her about lord Melbourne, but Atticus got a bit mad. Almost everyone is in the living room at the time trying to find out how this fight started caused by Francis, Scout and Jem’s cousin, had happened. After Atticus says to Jack that Scout knows that she tries her best also tha both Jem and Scout will have to absorb some ugly things pretty soon. Atticus knows that with time one dy the children will realize that they are not attracting attension. This quote is a perfect example of his philosophy relating…
Throughout the novel Harper Lee had the Finch family to play the role as a family that really does not see a problem with color difference, meaning they seen no problem being acquaintance with colored people. Atticus had raise Jem and Scout on his own for many years being as though their mother had passed away while they were young. They had a housekeeper by the name of Calpurnia who had treated the children as if they were her own, but although Calpurnia was the children’s elder she had still referred to them as sir and mam. As Atticus had taken on the role of defending Tom Robinson the children Jem and Scout started to see the changes of the people that surrounded them. Jem and Scout had the spirit of a mockingbird being a though they are young and children do not always see the hatred in people’s hearts. In the novel Atticus says “You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point of view... Until you climb inside of his skin and walk around in it.” That quote grasps the exact meaning of the difference in how African Americans were treated from…
Atticus Finch shows his love for Jem and Scout, his children, by providing them with an education. Atticus teaches his children to accept others no matter how the look or act: “You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point of view” (Harper Lee 39). This allows the children to choose their friends, due to the personality. In Alabama during the 1930’s, racism was still an issue even thought the civil war was over. Some people in Maycomb, the town where the Finch family lives, still dislike and abuse the blacks: “Atticus Finch’s no better than the niggers and trash he works for” (Lee 135). Atticus’s children know how to deal with this situation, because Scout “pulled at Jem’s sleeve” to leave (Lee 136). This shows maturity by the children. Atticus teaches his children how to react due to the situation that has revolved around the Finch family.…
Throughout the novel, family is expressed in a very large way. In the beginning, it seems as though Atticus Finch does not have a very loving easy relationship with his children. Jem and Scout call their father “Atticus”…
Children are perceived as innocence due to their lack of understanding and morality. Throughout the story, Scout's moral perspective develops from innocence towards grown-up because of the harsh reality she is exposed to. She learns valuable lessons and is given eye opening advice from Calpurnia, Miss Maudie, and Atticus. In fact, the mockingbird is first introduced to Scout when Atticus gives them the rule to not shoot mockingbirds because it is a sin. Miss Maudie explains the rule when she tells Scout, "Mockingbirds don't do one thing but make music for us to enjoy. They don't eat up people's gardens, don't nest in corncribs, they don't do one thing but sing their hearts out for us. That's why it's a sin to kill a mockingbird." (pg. 119) The mockingbird symbolizes innocence and pure good that is to be protected. As a mockingbird, Scout is unprotected from the cruelty during Tom Robinson's trial, and soon changes her perspective of things. One of the things she looks at differently is Boo Radley. After Boo had given her and Jem small presents in the hole of the oak and he covered her with the blanket when Miss Maudie's house was on fire, Scout realized that Boo wasn't as bad as the town gossip made him out to be. Her realization was strengthened when she found out that it was Boo Radley who had saved her and Jem from Bob Ewell. Once Scout had escorted him home, making…
Atticus Finch said, “I’d rather you shot at tin cans in the backyard, but I know you’ll go after birds. Shoot all the blue jays you want, if you can hit ‘em, but remember it’s a sin to kill a mockingbird." Jem learns that it’s wrong to kill a mockingbird because they are innocent creatures. As the citizens of Maycomb are introduced, you realize all the hatred and violence that kids, parents, and friends have to experience. Some children, like Dill, who’s basically an orphan, want nothing except to have a family to look after them; Or Jem, who start out enjoying their young lives, but later grow up to a world full of wrong-doing. Even a man who was victimized from one event that happened in his teen years, grows up innocent minded, yet was still treated as a foe after he grew up. Harper Lee destroys the innocence of three child-like “mockingbirds” in the novel, To Kill a Mockingbird, to metaphorically illustrate the pureness that’s lost in everyday life. Lee composes a few examples from the city of Maycomb, but soon you realize how these very instances happen in our own lives as well.…
“Transformation and the Search for Truth in Hannie Rayson’s Hotel Sorrento.” Consider Rayson’s subtle treatment of the everyday as a means of exploring deeper realities.…
Atticus influences many people in Maycomb, but the people he has the greatest affect on are his children. Atticus’s daughter, Scout Finch, pays Atticus a huge amount of respect. When, Scout, Jem, and their friend, Dill was playing the “Boo Radley Game” and Atticus caught them, Scout knew he did not approve. “Atticus’s arrival was [why she] wanted to quit the game.” (p.41). Scout has a lot of respect for Atticus and did not want to disappoint him. Also, she did noy want to get in trouble with Atticus. Atticus’s arrival caused Scout to rethink her actions and access the situation. Atticus’s other child, Jem Finch, also have been influenced a great deal by Atticus. When Atticus showed his shooting skills while shooting a mad dog, Scout wonders why he never told them about him being the deadliest shot in Maycomb. Jem says it is because “Atticus is a gentleman, just like me!” (p. 99). Atticus’s actions made Jem realize that people should always try to do what is right and be a gentleman. Jem also aspires to be like Atticus, seeing the way Atticus lives his life, makes Jem wants to be a gentleman, too. Atticus’s children are also influenced by Atticus from the moral lessons that he teaches them. In the first part of the book, Atticus told the children they are not allowed to shoot mockingbirds because mockingbirds are innocent, and does not hurt anyone. About a year or two…