Character Analysis Of Miss Maudie In To Kill A Mockingbird, By Harper Lee

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Scout’s neighbor, Miss Maudie, proves herself on multiple occasions to be a very kind and nondiscriminatory person. Scout admires her because she sees her as a lively and active woman, just like Scout, while the other women she knows only seem interested in tea parties and gossip. The two also share a love for the outdoors: Miss Maudie “hated her house” and thought “time spent indoors was time wasted” (Lee 68). While arguing with Aunt Alexandra over Atticus and the trial, Miss Maudie shows that she is against racism by drawing attention to the gross inequality between Whites and Blacks in Maycomb: “‘We trust [Atticus] to do right. It’s that simple.’ ‘Who?’ [...] ‘The handful of people in this town who say that fair play is not marked White Only’ (Lee 391). …show more content…

On a separate occasion she also teaches Scout to live her life to the fullest without worrying about small issues. While talking about the Mrs. Radley pestering Miss Maudie over religious differences, she tells Scout that “sometimes the Bible in the hand of one man is worse than a whiskey bottle in the hand of - oh, of your father” (Lee 73). By saying this, Miss Maudie is trying to convey to Scout that some people who are inherently bad people are able to twist the words of something typically interpreted for good such as the bible to fit their own cruel intentions, while inherently good people like Atticus would still be kind when using something like alcohol that clouds people’s mind and makes them more irritable. Miss Maudie further explains to Scout that “if Atticus drank until he was drunk he wouldn’t be as hard as some men at their best. There

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