Later he goes back to collect his torn pants to find that they've been detangled and sewn back together. Later in the year when the winter was unbearably cold there was a fire at one of the neighboring houses. All the residents of the neighborhood watched as the firemen tried to set it out eventually Scout comments how cold she was and soon notices that a blanket has been wrapped around her. Scout's family informs her that Boo Radley was the one one who wrapped it around her. Eventually the excitement died down and Scout and Jem decided to start exploring the central maycomb area. The problem was that Mrs. Dubose taughted them every time they passed her house. Eventually she got on Jem’s nerves and he snapped, cutting up her garden. Mrs. Dubose’s daughter calls Atticus and tells him what Jem did. Atticus tells Jem to go back to her house and apologize. She eventually sentences him to read to her for an hour or so. Soon, when she passes away she learns that she had a terrible morphine addiction and that her behaviors were rational giving her circumstances. Her final farewell was a gift to Jem. Which was one of the flowers he destroyed, this was obviously incredibly symbolic. Thus ending the…
Mrs.Dubose was an old lady who lived alone. Jem and Scout thought she was nothing but a crabby, old lady that was annoyed by everything. Many people judged Mrs.Dubose before they knew her. Many people in the town made up many rumors because they didn't respect her. If people actually took the time to learn about Mrs.Dubose they would realize that she was only like that because she didn't have anybody. One day, before Jem knew what she was really like he ruined all of her flowers. As a punishment Atticus made him go read to her several times, he learned many things about her (Lee 108). As time goes by she finally passes away and she gave Jem a gift. It was a Wooden cigar box with wildflowers in it. Jem realizes that she was a very good person and that everything that was said about her was not…
When Jem damages Mrs Duboses property after she openly insults Atticus, he reacts by making Jem go over to her house to read to her as he knows she suffers from a morphine addiction and therefore the gesture would help. Despite all the bad things she had said about Atticus, he still sends his children to help her because he knows that it would be the right thing to do.…
For Scout and Jem, Mrs. Dubose is a distressing, barely human force that takes over their afternoons after Jem goes crazy on her camellias. Scout introduces her as “plain hell” mainly due to the fact that she was always bad-mouthing them and even called Atticus a “nigger-lover”. It is not until after she dies that Scout and Jem get a sense of what Atticus sees in her. Although the children believe that Mrs. Dubose is a thoroughly bad woman, Atticus admires her for the courage with which she battles her morphine addiction and hopes that Scout and Jem see that in her as well.…
The vulgar language and the disapproval radiating off of Mrs. Dubose displays, to Jem and Scout, that she was a brute and “[they] could do nothing to please her,” (99). Since Jem and Scout go home angry about the things that Mrs. Dubose would say, Atticus tells them, or Jem specifically that, “...you just hold your head high and be a gentleman. Whatever she says to you, it’s your job not to let her make you mad,” this shows that Atticus wants to make sure that his son does not stoop to the level that Mrs. Dubose is on just because they have conflict between them and that he should rise above it and try to overcome all the hatred thrown their way (100). Mrs. Dubose gets under Jem’s skin when she says, “...a Finch...in the courthouse lawing for niggers..,” (101). Jem does not react to this right away but, on the way home from town, where they bought toys, Jem, “snatched [scout’s] baton and ran flailing wildly up the steps into Mrs. Dubose front porch...cut the tops off every camellia bush Mrs. Dubose owned…,” as punishment for doing so Jem had to read to Mrs. Dubose for a month (102-103). In all, if Jem had not stooped down the Mrs. Dubose’s level then he would have not created even more…
“Success is not final, Failure is not fatal, it is the courage to continue even without a guarantee of success that counts.” In To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee she can change the way a person sees something in the blink of eye, she shows courage in so many ways. Harper Lee uses Mrs.Dubose as a character to show courage. She uses Mrs.Dubose as one of Atticus’s example to show Jem what real courage is. A part that shows this is when Mrs.Dubose is sick in bed and Jem comes and reads to her and Atticus explains the situation she is in. She also uses Scout as an example of courage as well.So in the book To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee uses characters to show what real courage is. She uses Mrs.Dubose when she was getting off her morphine addiction.Scout by showing her when she stood up…
When Atticus hears of what Jem has done,he demands Jem go and apologize to Mrs.Dubose. She requests that as a result for his punitive actions, Jem should read to her:” She wants me to come every afternoon after school and Saturdays and read to her out loud for two hours. Atticus do I have to?” (p.140). Atticus informs Jem he must read to her although he despises the idea. When Jem, accompanied by Scout, goes to read to her, he learns that she has frequent fits. One day Atticus goes to Mrs.Dubose's and arrives back brandishing a candy box. He tells…
He judged her before making an effort to know why she was so grumpy all the time. Despite all these and her pain during that period, she had specially requested Jessie to fix the box for Jem. After learning about the truth from Atticus, Jem realised that his judgment was wrong. Contrary to his initial thoughts about Mrs Dubose that she was a cantankerous old woman with no redeeming features, she was actually a courageous lady who chose the harder way out in order to uphold her beliefs. Yet it was already too late for Jem to redeem himself from his past mistreatment of Mrs Dubose.…
The conversations with Mrs. Dubose reveal attributes of the Finches. Because “it was impossible to go to town without passing [Mrs. Dubose’s] house unless [Scout and Jem] wished to walk a mile out of the way,” an interaction is inevitable. Jem and Scout strive to please Mrs. Dubose, but she always replies with derogatory statements. These statements make Jem furious. Atticus, their father, tells Jem to be a gentleman and not to let her make him mad. This request could be pursued by Jem until Mrs. Dubose insults Atticus.…
Atticus is a wise person because he is able to use the knowledge he receives from his lifelong experiences to enlighten others in distinct ways. When Mrs. Dubose-- the Finch‟s elderly neighbor—dies, Atticus uses her death as an opportunity to teach Jem and Scout. She was a morphine addict who was dying of old age. Mrs. Dubose wanted to die clean of any drugs even though the withdraw process caused her much pain. Atticus believes her decision shows true courage. He explains to his children, “„I want you to see what real courage is, instead of getting the idea that courage is a man with a gun in his hand. It‟s when you know you‟re licked before you even begin but you begin anyways and you see it through no matter what”‟ (Lee 149). Atticus respects Mrs. Dubose for her courage and stresses that shooting the rabid dog Tim…
We meet the name of Mrs Henry Lafayette Dubose in the very beginning of the book and the first thing we know about her is that she is a plain hell, as Scout introduced this elderly women who lives down the street from the Finch’s. When the kids go down town, they run by her house, trying to avoid her, because she is very mean. Mrs. Dubose spends her days either lying in bed or sitting on her porch, confined to wheelchair and gazing at passing neighbours. The only person taking care about her is a black girl, her both made and nurse. The only entertainment she can afford is annoying and offending people. Scout confesses more than once to a hatred of Mrs. Dubose. Rumours about a pistol concealed among her numerous shawls and wraps doesn’t increase neighbours’ sympathy to her. Like many others in Maycomb, this old lady is a racist and pesters the young Finches by slandering about their family and calling Atticus a negro lover. It drives Jem mad and he attacks and cuts off Mrs. Dubose’s camellias, which she fond of. When children come to her place, they discover that old Mrs. Dubose even nastier than they thought. She has a complexion of a dirty pillowcase, her mouth is wet with saliva, the cuticles are grown up over her fingernail. Sometimes later when she dies it turns out that she was fatally ill and drug-addicted/ Atticus tells his son about her fighting with addiction as a example of courage/ But there many doubts weather it is a true courage or not/ Malignant, meanest old woman knows that she will die soon. It is unlikely that she is in harmony with the world, God and her own. I dare suppose that all her fighting is nothing more than looking aside from the fear of death/ she tries to concentrate all her attention on anything but coming death/ even concerning camellia sent nobody knows what MD thought about, when mailed it. May be the first Jem’s guess was right and she wanted just sting her the last time/…
Harper Lee shows the true nature of courage to Jem and Scout through the actions if the iconic character Mrs. Dubose. Mrs. Dubose is an ill and old lady who has had an addiction with morphine all her life. Atticus tells the Finch kids that, “She said she meant to break herself of it before she died and that what she did” (Lee 148). This clearly shows that Mrs. Dubose is courageous because she recognizes that she has a flaw and that she has to fix it. She makes it her goal to die free of this addiction and goes through so much, but in the end accomplishing this difficult goal.…
Dubose. She wasn’t the most pleasant lady in the world, and even struggled to overcome a drug addiction. In spite of this though, Atticus treats her with the same respect and kindness as everyone else. When his kids start getting impatient with her, he explained to them that she really is an excellent lady and tells them that she “was the bravest person I ever knew.” Atticus encouraged the children not to detest her, even though she may appear unpleasant, but to instead be patient and compassionate with those that are challenging to get along…
He took the time to get to know her. “‘Mrs. Dubose was a morphine addict’... ‘She said she mean’t to break herself of it before she died, and that’s what she did.’” (111). Secretly, she was using the kids to ween herself off. She was, deep inside, a good person. She didn’t want to die tied to morphine. She wanted to die free, and being old and wise she found away. She used the kids, had them read everyday, gradually longer and longer so she would take her morphine later. Atticus was aware of her plan, he said he would have sent them down anyways, to help her out, that’s why he allowed the 30 day reading in the first place. In conclusion both Atticus and Mrs. Dubose showed their bad side more then their good side. It’s up to the kids to discover the good and only see the good. Atticus seemed too old for anything, but on the flip side he had many talents, and a select few hidden for the sake of the kids and their future. Mrs. Dubose gave herself the image of an old mean person, but really on the inside she was dying and wanted help, she wanted to die free. As the book continues we will be introduced to more people, each with their own good and bad, it’s up to Jem and Scout to only see the…
However, he wanted Jem to see the different view of courage by assigning him to read to Mrs. Dubose to distract her from the addiction of morphine. After her death, she gifted Jem a white camellia, but Jem felt annoyed that she doesn't leave him alone. Atticus thoughtfully explained Mrs. Dubose have been withdrawn for morphine while he read to disabuse his hatred for her. “I wanted you to see what real courage is, instead of getting the idea that courage is a man with a gun in his hand... You rarely win but sometimes you do.…