Morality In To Kill A Mockingbird

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Morality and Life
As a society, parents try to teach their children the difference between right and wrong, that is basically called “Mortality”. In the novel “To Kill a Mockingbird”. Harper Lee defines mortality through the moral lessons that Atticus gives to his children. She tries to inform the readers about moral courage and the non-judgemental people because she thinks that mortality is an important ingredient in making the lives of people become better.

Atticus shows that moral courage is necessary to make society excel, so he advices his children to be strong. First, he wants to develop Jem’s personality hence he lets him to go every day and spend the night reading stories for Mrs. Dubose. For example, Mrs.Dubose passes away, Atticus
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So, he teaches them to live other’s life first and then judge them and that will make their and other’s lives more fair. Atticus asks Scout not to behave in an inappropriate way because judging others without knowing their condition is not just and fair. To interpret this point, when Scout is mad and she does not want to go to school because of the teacher and students, her dad tells her that this should not prevent her from going to school and judging them is a bad thing “-until you climb into his skin and walk around in it”(38). He tells her that judging and hating people will not benefit her because it will make her life more complicated and hatred never brings happiness, therefore, she has to live their condition and know what others are passing through since maybe they are passing in some circumstances that make them behave that way. Furthermore, when Atticus says something about when he triees to send a message, he does not relate it to one thing and that is what Lee tries to let the reader notice, so when Atticus tells his daughter that she has to climb into others’ skin and walk around in it, he also means that she has to do the same thing for Boo Radley. For more clarification, when Mrs.Maudie’s house is on fire, Atticus tells Jem that one day, she may thank Boo for protecting her. “Someday, maybe, Scout can thank for covering her up… Boo Radley”(80). Atticus here tries to tell her that Boo Radley is a good person and that she has to know him better and not to judge him just from what others tell stories about him then she knows that throughout the novel when he leaves gifts, fixes Jem’s pants, protects her with a blanket, and when he saves them from Bob Ewell. To conclude, Scout learns a plethora of moral things that make her life get better and one and one of them when she does not judge