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To Kill A Mockingbird


He can't see the evil in anyone "What on earth could Ewell do to me, sister?" .His eagerness to dismiss the fact that Bob Ewell could harm him is seen by the reader as a fault. By not seeing that Bobs "kind"d do anything to pay off a grudge" he places his children in danger. The white society finds his fault to be defending Tom Robinson ""you know the court appointed him to defend this nigger". "Yeah, but Atticus aims to defend him."" They find this eagerness promiscuous and continually call him a "nigger lover". Harper Lee uses parallelism to emphasise to the reader that Atticus defending Tom Robinson is a "real nice" thing to do. Mrs Dubose's morphine addiction and her desire to beat it even though she knows she will die parallels Atticus" fight for justice, even though he is facing certain failure "It's when you know your licked before you begin and you see it through no matter what. You rarely win, but sometimes you do." Through the use of this technique Harper allows the reader to see Atticus as "real nice" due to his going out of his way to help Tom Robinson and others.
             Calpurnia is a character in "To Kill a Mockingbird" whose only fault is her desire to fit into both the white and black society. Atticus is pleased by her upbringing of Jem and Scout "She tried bringing them up according to her lights, and Cal's lights are pretty good". Calpurnia is well respected by Atticus "I couldn't have got along without her all these years" and Atticus being a admired white man broadens the respect the white society and the reader has for her. Although Calpurnia is well educated in order to remain a part of the black community she must speak like a black person. Calpurnia expresses this fault to Jem "Suppose you and Scout talked coloured talk at home - it"d be out of place, wouldn't it? Now what if I talked white - folks talk at church, and with my neighbours? They"d think I was puttin" on airs to beat Moses".


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