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Maturing In To Kill A Mockingbird

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Maturing In To Kill A Mockingbird
Maturity is not measured by age. It’s an attitude built by experience. In Harper Lee’s To Kill A Mockingbird characters such as Jem and Scout is seen maturing throughout the book because the way they think and feel about someone/something changes as they experience more of the real world. At the beginning of the book, Scout, the narrator, has trouble getting along with people and acted upon the prejudice that existed among her. This was until her father, Atticus Finch, teaches Scout to climb into people’s skin and walk around in it, which allows her to view different perspectives, which helped her get along with people. Near the end of the book, Scout walks Boo home, and when she stands on his porch she learns his point of view and how he …show more content…
She is unable to understand how Walter would feel before and after the remark. This shows Scout in her early years cannot sympathize which is the key to become mature and to spiritually grow as a person. After the incident, Atticus teaches Scout to look at things from another person’s point of view. This was a vital lesson in the book because this is when Scout truly starts to mature. This is shown later in the book when Scout sympathized with Mayella: “…it came to me [Scout] that Mayella Ewell must have been the loneliest person in the world. She was even lonelier than Boo Radley, who had not been out of the house in twenty-five years” (191). This goes to show that as Scout spiritually grows older she learns to sympathize and therefore mature. All in all, Scout learns to sympathize by growing spiritually older and facing new experiences in life, thus maturing as a …show more content…
Throughout the book Scout had been shown to be an empathetic character. In chapter 4 Scout had come across gifts given by Boo Radely, evident when she says: “My first impulse was to get it [gum] into my mouth as quickly as possible, but I remembered where I was” (33). When Scout eats the gum it shows that she had trusted the gifts placed in the tree by Boo. As she realized the gifts were from Boo she found out that Boo was a lonely, isolated soul that wanted to interact with the children. This part of the book of the book shows us that Scout trusted Boo which is vital because trust and empathy go hand in hand as it is an effective platform for communication, in addition to that, we also learned that Scout’s trust lead to her understanding of what type of character Boo really is. Similarly, Scout had empathized with Boo in the end of the book when Scout was on Boo’s porch climbing into his skin. Which is evident when says: “Atticus was right. One time he said you never really know a man until you stand in his shoes and walk around in them. Just standing on the Radley porch was enough” (279). This showed that Scout had finally understood how Boo felt of the children which in turn shows how empathetic Scout was being to Boo. All in all, Scout being empathetic to Author Radely shows that she trusts, understands how lonely he is and also understands that

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