Examples Of Guilty In To Kill A Mockingbird

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“I shut my eyes,” he said. Judge Taylor was polling the jury: ‘Guilty. guilty. guilty. guilty.’ I peeked at Jem. His hands were white from gripping the balcony rail, and his shoulders jerked as if each ‘guilty’ was a separate stab between them,” states Ms. Finch in To Kill a Mockingbird (Lee 240). Harper Lee was the author of this piece, born in 1926, a few years before the Great Depression, and lived in Alabama where segregation was legal, meaning no interracial marriages, separate passenger cars, waiting rooms, schools, and many more. Based during the Great Depression in Maycomb, Alabama, Lee’s story is under the narration of Jean Louise Finch, who goes by Scout. Jean Louise lives in a fictional town, from 1933-1935, slavery has been abolished but segregation still lingers to keep white …show more content…

In addition to always giving people esteem, they should not judge people by their social class. If people judged others by their class, then those people would feel like they might be unnecessary and unwanted. Aunt Alexandra told Scout to wear a dress if she was going to join her group to make a good impression (Lee 134). Alexandra seemed to know that she would get judged by what they wore because of their class. Walter refuses to take the money offered to him by his teacher due to not being able to pay it back (Lee 22). The refusal to take the money offered shows that Walter knows what he can and can not afford because of his standing. Scout makes fun of and picks on Walter, not only because she thinks he got her in trouble, but also because he is a Cunningham (Lee 27). The treatment Scout gives Walter means that she knows some about her social standing, and knows she holds more power than Walter. Someone should not be criticized for their wealth. Lastly, not only should people not be subject to disrespect because of their classification, but also all people are created equal, no matter their race, and should be treated as