ipl-logo

To Kill A Mockingbird Quote Analysis

588 Words3 Pages
In To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, Jem invites Walter Cunningham Jr., Scout’s classmate, to have dinner with their family. While they eat dinner at Atticus’s house, Walter pours molasses all over his food, shocking Scout; she questions him rudely. Calpurnia pulls her into the kitchen and scolds her, telling her to treat him well because he is company. To justify her actions, she says, “‘He ain’t company, Cal, he’s just a Cunningham--’” (Lee 27). Scout says that because she believes the Cunninghams are worth nothing. Since they are nothing, she does not have to treat Walter like company. By reading this quote, the reader can tell that Scout does not know much about how people in the lower classes live. Unlike the Cunninghams, Scout is
Open Document