Who is maudie atkinson in to kill a mockingbird




















I said what did you do, Stephanie, move over in the bed and make room for him? That shut her up a while. Miss Maudie's joke embarrasses Miss Stephanie into holding her tongue , but perhaps it's effective because it plays off the truth: Miss Stephanie wants to know everyone's intimate secrets, just as if she were sleeping with them.

Jem and Scout count Miss Maudie as a friend because, unlike most adults, she treats them with respect. Just like Atticus , who she says is "the same in his house as he is on the public streets" 5. While Miss Stephanie is always poking and prying, especially at Scout, and Mrs. Merriweather can't even speak to children in the same tone of voice she uses for grown-ups, Miss Maudie sees the kids as slightly-less-experienced adults, and treats them like that.

During one instance, Scout sees Miss Maudie staring at them from across the street, her hedge clippers poised up in mid-air. When Jem and Dill refuse to play with Scout because she is "acting like a girl", Scout decides to spend time with Miss Maudie, who, after her bath, sits on her porch. We learn she is a widow who loves to garden, but hates her house. Miss Maudie allowed Jem and Scout to play in her yard, as long as they didn't touch her azaleas. Miss Maudie tells the children that Nathan Radley shot at a black man in his collard patch Chapter 7.

Chapter 8. Avery accuses them of bringing on this bad weather. Scout, knowing Miss Maudie shouts for her hat and she and Atticus discuss Atticus shakes her.

She hears a horrifying sound and asks whose house is burning. Atticus sends Scout and Jem to stand in front of the Radley Place for Men leave around dawn and Jem and Scout approach Miss Maudie and They offer condolences for her house, He suggests she hire a black man to help and Chapter She agrees with Atticus and says that mockingbirds just sing for people. Atticus and Mr. Tate head back to town. Scout, Dill, and Jem go across the street to see if Miss Maudie is going to court to watch.

Jem leads Dill and Scout outside. They see Miss Stephanie talking to Mr. The ladies' lamentations over the living conditions of the Mrunas, an African tribe, leads to a discussion about how ungrateful the women believe Maycomb's African American community to be. Miss Maudie is the person who ends that line of conversation with two sentences.

Aunt Alexandra may not always agree with the course of discussion, but she refuses to be confrontational outside of her own family.

Previous Boo Radley and Tom Robinson. Next Bob and Mayella Ewell. Removing book from your Reading List will also remove any bookmarked pages associated with this title. Are you sure you want to remove bookConfirmation and any corresponding bookmarks?



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