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The Influence Of Racism In To Kill A Mockingbird By Harper Lee

Decent Essays

Have you ever had someone or something impact you so much that it changed your life? Just like how a singular bone fracture could take you out of activities and make you realize how much that arm is actually needed. Everything that happens in life has an impact and consequence.
In Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird, both Boo Radley, and when she made fun of Walter Cunningham because he put syrup on everything, impacted Scout. Towards the beginning of the book, Scout makes fun of Walter Cunningham when he comes to her house for supper and ends up putting syrup on everything he ate. This impacted her because she was taught a lesson. “Atticus summoned Calpurnia, who returned bearing the syrup pitcher. She stood waiting for Walter to help himself. Walter poured syrup on his vegetables and meat with a generous hand. He would probably have poured it into his milk glass had I not asked what the sam hill he was doing… Atticus shook his head at me again…
‘First of all,’ he said, ‘if you can learn a simple trick, Scout, you’ll get along a lot better with all kinds of folks. You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point of view-…- until you climb into his skin and walk around in it.’” (Lee 32, 39). After she got in trouble for making fun of Walter, she was taught to respect him more. She stepped into his shoes. She learned what it was like to be him and why him, like others, would do odd things. If anything, Boo Radley has had such a big influence on

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