Honor in Harper Lee's To Kill a Mocking Bird

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To Kill a Mockingbird - Honor

" Before you criticize someone, walk a mile in their shoes. That way you're a mile away and you have their shoes." Although Scout Finch in Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird is a young girl, she learns many important lessons about life throughout the novel. These lessons, among others, are that she mustn't take everything she hears to heart as the truth; that she mustn't take face judgments as actual facts and respect for Atticus.

One thing that Scout learns is not to believe that everything she hears as the truth. This is a very good lesson because if you did, you become very confused because people can rarely agree on how a story went. For instance, when Scout wants to know more about Boo Radley, Stephanie Crawford gets excited because she sees this as an opportunity to open her mouth and goes on to tell Jem that, " she woke up in the middle of the night and saw him looking straight through the window at her .... said that his head was a skull" (13.) Then Jem goes further into what he heard by saying, " he dined on raw squirrel and any cats he could catch" (13.) This shows how the town compensates not knowing things about others by making up stories. Also Scout sees lies getting passed off as truth when Atticus takes on Tom Robinson as a client. Mean things are spread about Atticus and his credibility is questioned. Since Scout has a short temper and ears that hear everything she is easily offended at the comments that are said, such as the comment made by Mrs. Dubose, " Your father father's no better than the ni**ers and trash he works for." This angers Scout and Jem very much. It also shows that the town isn't happy with the moral decision's that Atticus makes and feel the need to bash him in unfair ways. Scout learns that if she keeps listening to what is said, she would go insane from not hitting anyone.

Another thing that Scout finds throughout the course of the novel is that you can't make honest and fair judgments by first looks alone.

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