Jones was super kind and nice to Roger because, any other lady would have called the cops on him. Roger changed a lot on page 32 paragraph five Roger asked Mrs. Jones does she need someone to run to the store for her obviously he was trying to be nice for she would trust him.
Plus Roger had a chance to escape but instead he wanted Mrs. Jones to trust him. Jones gave him food and money for his shoes she treated him like her child. She really saved him by teaching him a lesson because, if he could have been locked up or killed if it was someone else. When Scout becomes empathetic, she finds it easier to get along with people, easier to understand the situation.
The small acts of kindness that once frightened her now gave her a sense of sentimentality. To Kill a Mockingbird tells the story that strangers aren 't always bad, okay, that 's not what it 's about but it does play a big role throughout the book especially at the end.
While Boo is secretly watching the kids, he starts to care about them and you see proof of that by the end of the book. Scout helps to eliminate this problem by being compassionate for Atticus and running in and wanting to help him.
When she runs in she starts talking to a person she remembered, which was Mr. Cunningham about his son, Walter Cunningham, and by doing so she settled the tension and made conversation. Which allowed the men to leave on a good note. When Scout and Jem are reading to Mrs. They also helped her to slowly get rid of her addiction to drugs, by slowly depriving her from them a little longer each reading.
Show More. The men who come that evening are a mob with the intention of killing Tom Robinson. Atticus was staying outside the jail with the hope of disarming the situation. When Scout and the boys arrive on the scene, they don't truly comprehend what is happening. Scout does not understand these men intend to kill Tom before he can even go to trial.
It is the children's presence that disrupts the mob and eventually causes them to leave. The children make the men awkwardly aware of their cowardice and shame.
Atticus tells Jem to take Scout and Dill home, but Jem doesn't want to. Father and son face off. One of the men grabs Jem, and Scout kicks him right where it counts, making him back off. Finally, Scout sees a familiar face: Mr.
And she starts talking. She asks him about his entailment, tells him to say hi to Walter for her, and keeps prattling away until his lack of answers really starts to get to her. Just then, Mr. Cunningham squats down and tells Scout that he's going to give Walter her message. He tells the other men that they're going to leave, and they do. A voice comes from above: Tom Robinson is asking if the men have gone.
From across the square, another voice: Mr. Underwood has been playing sniper backup from The Maycomb Tribune office. Atticus and Mr. Underwood talk for a while, and then Atticus and the kids take Atticus's stuff to his car to go home. Scout thinks Jem is going to get royally chewed out for following Atticus into town, but her dad actually just rubs his head affectionately.
They are so weird. Walter Cunningham Jr. Tired of ads? Join today and never see them again.
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