To Kill A Mockingbird
TKAM essay
Harper Lee’s novel To Kill a Mockingbird teaches many lessons about how to treat others with compassion and sympathy. However, the most important lesson the book conveys is tolerance. This is shown through Scouts tolerance with Cecil Jacobs, Atticus's tolerance with Mr. Ewell, and Jem's tolerance through Mrs. Dubose's rude comments.
Scout shows the reader that she has tolerance. Scout is the type of girl that doesn't take any crap from anyone, so she would be the last character that would have tolerance. Scout went to school and was warned by Atticus that she was going to hear not very nice things about him. Last time she heard something bad about Atticus she flipped and got into a fist fight. But Atticus told her to ignore the comments. While Scout was at school she was approached by Cecil who called Atticus names. '“My folks said your daddy was a disgrace an' that n-word oughta hang from the water-tank!”' (76) Now usually this would set Scout off the deep end. But remembering what Atticus told her she tolerated his comments and walked away. Scout showed me that I can control my own body and if somebody hurts you be the better person and don't hurt them back. "...I drew a bead on him, remembered what Atticus
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Scout shows tolerance when she tolerated Cecil's words about her father. She didn't fight him but she tolerated his words, dropped her fists, and walked away. Atticus shows tolerance when he was approached by Mr. Ewell on his way to the post office minding his own business. Mr. Ewell spat on him, cursed at him, and threatened to kill him and Atticus's response? Tolerate his actions, words, and threats just to walk away like nothing happened. Jem showed tolerance by tolerating Mrs. Dubose's comments by ignoring her and walking away from the situation. Obviously, tolerance is the most important message in Harper Lee’s To Kill a