What Are The Lessons Scout Learned In To Kill A Mockingbird

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To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee is one of the most renowned novels in America. The novel follows Jean Louis Finch, a young girl living in a rural, racist part of Maycomb, Alabama during the Great Depression. At the beginning of the novel she is a young and naïve child with only one mindset. As she grows older threw the wisdom of her father and circumstances in which her and her father were put in she learns self-control, not to judge others, and that people are not always as they seem to be. From learning all of these lessons she will become wiser and a better person. The first lesson Scout learned was self-control. The case of Tom Robinson, a black man accused of raping a white woman, is a circumstance that helped Scout realizes the importance of self-control. Throughout this case the kids at Scout's school picked on her and called her father names because he was defending Tom in the case. Every time Scout got she fought the other kids at her school. Her father warned her that people are very racist and made her promise not to fight no matter what the other kids say about them at school. one day while she was at school a kid came up to her and was calling Atticus names, she put up her fist and was ready to fight. She slowly put them down remembering what her father had said about her fighting. As she was walking away …show more content…

Dolphus Raymond, a man that lives and socializes with blacks, has mixed children, and was thought of as a drunk. He always came into town on his horse falling from side to side with a drink concealed in a brown paper bag. When Dill, Jim, and Scout came out of the court house Mr. Raymond came up to them and offered Dill some of his drink to settle his stomach. When Dill took a sip of it he grinned and said to Scout "Scout, it's nothing but Coca-Cola" (Lee 267). In that moment Scout realized you can't judge someone without meeting

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