To Kill A Mockingbird Scout Maturity

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As children, many have been able to experience what it is like to be a little kid, playing, eating and sleeping, not worrying about anything, not even chores. But when children grow older, they get to experience some problems that they had to figure out, maturing them. Did you ever had to experience things that made you grow and mature quickly? Some children mature so fast, they do not get to enjoy being a little innocent happy child, not because of choice, but things that happen to them and their family. In the book To Kill a Mockingbird, the author, Harper Lee uses three events that affect a little girl named Scout maturing her more and more throughout the book, including events such as Calpurnia taking Scout and Jem to church, Boo Radley’s existence, and Atticus Defending a Negro, Tom Robinson. …show more content…

At church, a lady named Lula tells Calpurnia, “‘I wants to know why you bringin’ white chillun to nigger church.’ ” (158) when Scout came in to the church, she hears Lula talking to Calpurnia and all of the sudden Scout feels unwelcomed. This matures Scout because she sees the racism and it is the reality in the world around her. At the end of church, Scout talks to Reverend Sykes about the Robinson family and asks “‘why were you takin’ up collection for Tom Robinson’s wife?’ ” (162) Scout has understood that the church was helping Helen and her three children, but Scout never really thought about money, she just enjoyed being outdoors every single day and this was one of the first days Scout really started thinking about money and real life. This affected Scout and made her mature because Scout never thought as life in a hard way; she thought everything was just that simple and this made her view life at a different angle. The day Calpurnia brought Jem and Scout to her church, Scout learned many things and matured from

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