Atticus Bully Quotes

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Harper Lee’s novel To Kill a Mockingbird is a story about acceptance of all types of people, no matter how they act, what they look like, and who they are. In the story Jem says, “If there's just one kind of folks, why can't they get along with each other? If they're all alike, why do they go out of their way to despise each other?” (Lee 304). Jem overall states that everyone is alike, so why do people have to go out of their way to be bullies? Harper Lee explains the life of characters that got bullied, but then were accepted for their differences. In the story, Atticus shows that he cares about everyone no matter what when he is the primary person that defends Tom Robinson, and his children look up to him for it which makes them accept him. …show more content…

You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point of view” (Lee 30) Atticus tells Scout about how to not judge someone, and try to get along with everyone. In the story Atticus tells Scout to not let people get into her mind: He says to fight with her mind instead of her hands (Lee 78). In the quote, Atticus was trying to teach Scout a lesson by telling her to not let people get the best of her. These quotes show that Atticus is a truly compassionate man that wants equality for Tom, which makes him benefit from defending Tom because his children accept him for it. Also, Tom Robinson is shown to be a good guy that is judged by white’s because he is a part of the black community: Tom was accepted when Atticus decided to stand up for him and be Tom's lawyer when his report accused him of rape. Atticus stands up for Tom when he says that he's simply defending Tom (Lee 100). This shows that Atticus is saying that he is going to stand up for Tom Robinson. “The main one is, if I didn’t I couldn’t hold up my head in town, I couldn’t represent this country in the legislature, I couldn’t even tell you or Jem not to do something again,” Atticus says (Lee …show more content…

These reasons show that Atticus is defending Tom even though he is a part of the black community, and that Atticus accepts him. Lastly, Boo Radley is judged because he’s a recluse and he always stays in his house, but at the end of the story Scout accepted him when she realized he was really a good person. “Atticus was right,” he said. One time he said, “You never really know a man until you stand in his shoes and walk around in them” says Scout (Lee 374). This shows that Scout finally realized that she shouldn’t judge anyone without first knowing them. At the end of the story, Scout told Atticus that people always go after Boo Radley without knowing anything about him, and Atticus replies that most people are nice when you don’t judge them before you see them. See the full list of Lee 376. The quote says that Scout was telling Atticus that she learned her lesson, and says that Boo Radley is actually a good person. This shows that Scout accepts Boo Radley when she finally visualizes that he's a nice person, and not the person that everyone makes him out to

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