preview

Scout Finch Attitude

Decent Essays

In To Kill A Mocking Bird, by Harper, Lee Scout Finch, Scout has a hard time understanding things the right way. She’s always judging people before getting to know them. Many of people do this, because they don’t know how to put them selves in other peoples perspective. But through Scout’s courageous, intelligent, and inquisitive attitude, she learns how to to walk through Boo Radley’s shoes. Scout Finch has a really courageous attitude. Harper Lee included a bit of humor and serious moments, into a very dangerous situation on the night the the mob arrived at the jail. The men were whispering, planning on something, Scout didn’t know what was going to happen. Scout sees this "sickeningly comic aspect of an unfunny situation" turn more deadly when one of the men try to manhandle Jem. I kicked the man swiftly. Barefooted, I was surprised to see him fall back in real pain. I intended to kick his shin, but aimed too high." (Lee 204) Scout was trying to protect her brother Jem from getting hurt. …show more content…

Scout sometimes liked to do things her way, and other times she liked to do them another way. Scout Finch was very smart, she knew how to read before anyone else in her class, so her teacher (Miss Caroline) got upset, because she didn't get to teach her how to read. Scout got her intelligence from her father, Atticus Finch. Scout can also read, and write in cursive as a first grader! Scout also understand things at her age, that most kids her age shouldn’t, she understands the racism that is going on, and the attitudes towards those people. “Miss Caroline told me to tell my father not to teach me any more it would interfere with my reading. ‘Teach me?’ I said in surprise. ‘He hasn't taught me anything, Miss Caroline. Atticus ain’t got the time to teach me anything.” (Lee 17) Scout expresses this because her brother always told her, she was born knowing how to read, and the teacher doesn't understand how she can read so well if she wasn't

Get Access