PART TWO
12
J
em was twelve. He was difficult to live with, inconsistent, moody. His appetite
was appalling, and he told me so many times to stop pestering him I consulted
Atticus: “Reckon he’s got a tapeworm?” Atticus said no, Jem was growing. I
must be patient with him and disturb him as little as possible.
This change in Jem had come about in a matter of weeks. Mrs. Dubose was
not cold in her grave—Jem had seemed grateful enough for my company when
he went to read to her. Overnight, it seemed, Jem had acquired an alien set of
values and was trying to impose them on me: several times he went so far as to
tell me what to do. After one altercation when Jem hollered, “It’s time you
started bein‘ a girl and acting right!” I burst into tears and fled to Calpurnia.
“Don’t you fret too much over Mister Jem—” she began.
“Mister Jem?”
“Yeah, he’s just about Mister Jem now.”
“He ain’t that old,” I said. “All he needs is somebody to beat him up, and I
ain’t big enough.”
“Baby,” said Calpurnia, “I just can’t help it if Mister Jem’s growin‘ up. He’s
gonna want to be off to himself a lot now, doin’ whatever boys do, so you just
come right on in the kitchen when you feel lonesome. We’ll find lots of things to
do in here.”
The beginning of that summer boded well: Jem could do as he pleased;
Calpurnia would do until Dill came. She seemed glad to see me when I appeared
in the kitchen, and by watching her I began to think there was some skill
involved in being a girl.
But summer came and Dill was not there. I received a letter and a snapshot
from him. The letter said he had a new father whose picture was enclosed, and
he would have to stay in Meridian because they planned to build a fishing boat.
His father was a lawyer like Atticus, only much younger. Dill’s new father had a
pleasant face, which made me glad Dill had captured him, but I was crushed.
Dill concluded by saying he would love me forever and not to worry, he would
come get me and marry me as soon as he got enough money together, so please
write.
The fact that I had a permanent fiancé was little compensation for his absence:
I had never thought about it, but summer was Dill by the fishpool smoking
string, Dill’s eyes alive with complicated plans to make Boo Radley emerge;
summer was the swiftness with which Dill would reach up and kiss me when
Jem was not looking, the longings we sometimes felt each other feel. With him,
life was routine; without him, life was unbearable. I stayed miserable for two
days.
As if that were not enough, the state legislature was called into emergency
session and Atticus left us for two weeks. The Governor was eager to scrape a
few barnacles off the ship of state; there were sit-down strikes in Birmingham;
bread lines in the cities grew longer, people in the country grew poorer. But
these were events remote from the world of Jem and me.
We were surprised one morning to see a cartoon in the Montgomery
Advertiser above the caption, “Maycomb’s Finch.” It showed Atticus barefooted
and in short pants, chained to a desk: he was diligently writing on a slate while
some frivolous-looking girls yelled, “Yoo-hoo!” at him.
“That’s a compliment,” explained Jem. “He spends his time doin‘ things that
wouldn’t get done if nobody did ’em.”
“Huh?”
In addition to Jem’s newly developed characteristics, he had acquired a
maddening air of wisdom.
“Oh, Scout, it’s like reorganizing the tax systems of the counties and things.
That kind of thing’s pretty dry to most men.”
“How do you know?”
“Oh, go on and leave me alone. I’m readin‘ the paper.”
Jem got his wish. I departed for the kitchen.
While she was shelling peas, Calpurnia suddenly said, “What am I gonna do
about you all’s church this Sunday?”
“Nothing, I reckon. Atticus left us collection.”
Calpurnia’s eyes narrowed and I could tell what was going through her mind.
“Cal,” I said, “you know we’ll behave. We haven’t done anything in church in
years.”
Calpurnia evidently remembered a rainy Sunday when we were both
fatherless and teacherless. Left to its own devices, the class tied Eunice Ann
Simpson to a chair and placed her in the furnace room. We forgot her, trooped
upstairs to church, and were listening quietly to the sermon when a dreadful
banging issued from the radiator pipes, persisting until someone investigated and
brought forth Eunice Ann saying she didn’t want to play Shadrach any more—
Jem Finch said she wouldn’t get burnt if she had enough faith, but it was hot
down there.
“Besides, Cal, this isn’t the first time Atticus has left us,” I protested.
“Yeah, but he makes certain your teacher’s gonna be there. I didn’t hear him
say this time—reckon he forgot it.” Calpurnia scratched her head. Suddenly she
smiled. “How’d you and Mister Jem like to come to church with me tomorrow?”
“Really?”
“How ‘bout it?” grinned Calpurnia.
If Calpurnia had ever bathed me roughly before, it was nothing compared to
her supervision of that Saturday night’s routine. She made me soap all over
twice, drew fresh water in the tub for each rinse; she stuck my head in the basin
and washed it with Octagon soap and castile. She had trusted Jem for years, but
that night she invaded his privacy and provoked an outburst: “Can’t anybody
take a bath in this house without the whole family lookin‘?”
Next morning she began earlier than usual, to “go over our clothes.” When
Calpurnia stayed overnight with us she slept on a folding cot in the kitchen; that
morning it was covered with our Sunday habiliments. She had put so much
starch in my dress it came up like a tent when I sat down. She made me wear a
petticoat and she wrapped a pink sash tightly around my waist. She went over
my patent-leather shoes with a cold biscuit until she saw her face in them.
“It’s like we were goin‘ to Mardi Gras,” said Jem. “What’s all this for, Cal?”
“I don’t want anybody sayin‘ I don’t look after my children,” she muttered.
“Mister Jem, you absolutely can’t wear that tie with that suit. It’s green.”
“‘smatter with that?”
“Suit’s blue. Can’t you tell?”
“Hee hee,” I howled, “Jem’s color blind.”
His face flushed angrily, but Calpurnia said, “Now you all quit that. You’re
gonna go to First Purchase with smiles on your faces.”
First Purchase African M.E. Church was in the Quarters outside the southern
town limits, across the old sawmill tracks. It was an ancient paint-peeled frame
building, the only church in Maycomb with a steeple and bell, called First
Purchase because it was paid for from the first earnings of freed slaves. Negroes
worshiped in it on Sundays and white men gambled in it on weekdays.
The churchyard was brick-hard clay, as was the cemetery beside it. If
someone died during a dry spell, the body was covered with chunks of ice until
rain softened the earth. A few graves in the cemetery were marked with
crumbling tombstones; newer ones were outlined with brightly colored glass and
broken Coca-Cola bottles. Lightning rods guarding some graves denoted dead
who rested uneasily; stumps of burned-out candles stood at the heads of infant
graves. It was a happy cemetery.
The warm bittersweet smell of clean Negro welcomed us as we entered the
churchyard—Hearts of Love hairdressing mingled with asafoetida, snuff, Hoyt’s
Cologne, Brown’s Mule, peppermint, and lilac talcum.
When they saw Jem and me with Calpurnia, the men stepped back and took
off their hats; the women crossed their arms at their waists, weekday gestures of
respectful attention. They parted and made a small pathway to the church door
for us. Calpurnia walked between Jem and me, responding to the greetings of her
brightly clad neighbors.
“What you up to, Miss Cal?” said a voice behind us.
Calpurnia’s hands went to our shoulders and we stopped and looked around:
standing in the path behind us was a tall Negro woman. Her weight was on one
leg; she rested her left elbow in the curve of her hip, pointing at us with upturned
palm. She was bullet-headed with strange almond-shaped eyes, straight nose,
and an Indian-bow mouth. She seemed seven feet high.
I felt Calpurnia’s hand dig into my shoulder. “What you want, Lula?” she
asked, in tones I had never heard her use. She spoke quietly, contemptuously.
“I wants to know why you bringin‘ white chillun to nigger church.”
“They’s my comp’ny,” said Calpurnia. Again I thought her voice strange: she
was talking like the rest of them.
“Yeah, an‘ I reckon you’s comp’ny at the Finch house durin’ the week.”
A murmur ran through the crowd. “Don’t you fret,” Calpurnia whispered to
me, but the roses on her hat trembled indignantly.
When Lula came up the pathway toward us Calpurnia said, “Stop right there,
nigger.”
Lula stopped, but she said, “You ain’t got no business bringin‘ white chillun
here—they got their church, we got our’n. It is our church, ain’t it, Miss Cal?”
Calpurnia said, “It’s the same God, ain’t it?”
Jem said, “Let’s go home, Cal, they don’t want us here—”
I agreed: they did not want us here. I sensed, rather than saw, that we were
being advanced upon. They seemed to be drawing closer to us, but when I
looked up at Calpurnia there was amusement in her eyes. When I looked down
the pathway again, Lula was gone. In her place was a solid mass of colored
people.
One of them stepped from the crowd. It was Zeebo, the garbage collector.
“Mister Jem,” he said, “we’re mighty glad to have you all here. Don’t pay no
‘tention to Lula, she’s contentious because Reverend Sykes threatened to church
her. She’s a troublemaker from way back, got fancy ideas an’ haughty ways—
we’re mighty glad to have you all.”
With that, Calpurnia led us to the church door where we were greeted by
Reverend Sykes, who led us to the front pew.
First Purchase was unceiled and unpainted within. Along its walls unlighted
kerosene lamps hung on brass brackets; pine benches served as pews. Behind the
rough oak pulpit a faded pink silk banner proclaimed God Is Love, the church’s
only decoration except a rotogravure print of Hunt’s The Light of the World.
There was no sign of piano, organ, hymn-books, church programs—the familiar
ecclesiastical impedimenta we saw every Sunday. It was dim inside, with a damp
coolness slowly dispelled by the gathering congregation. At each seat was a
cheap cardboard fan bearing a garish Garden of Gethsemane, courtesy Tyndal’s
Hardware Co. (You-Name-It-We-Sell-It).
Calpurnia motioned Jem and me to the end of the row and placed herself
between us. She fished in her purse, drew out her handkerchief, and untied the
hard wad of change in its corner. She gave a dime to me and a dime to Jem.
“We’ve got ours,” he whispered. “You keep it,” Calpurnia said, “you’re my
company.” Jem’s face showed brief indecision on the ethics of withholding his
own dime, but his innate courtesy won and he shifted his dime to his pocket. I
did likewise with no qualms.
“Cal,” I whispered, “where are the hymn-books?”
“We don’t have any,” she said.
“Well how—?”
“Sh-h,” she said. Reverend Sykes was standing behind the pulpit staring the
congregation to silence. He was a short, stocky man in a black suit, black tie,
white shirt, and a gold watch-chain that glinted in the light from the frosted
windows.
He said, “Brethren and sisters, we are particularly glad to have company with
us this morning. Mister and Miss Finch. You all know their father. Before I
begin I will read some announcements.”
Reverend Sykes shuffled some papers, chose one and held it at arm’s length.
“The Missionary Society meets in the home of Sister Annette Reeves next
Tuesday. Bring your sewing.”
He read from another paper. “You all know of Brother Tom Robinson’s
trouble. He has been a faithful member of First Purchase since he was a boy. The
collection taken up today and for the next three Sundays will go to Helen—his
wife, to help her out at home.”
I punched Jem. “That’s the Tom Atticus’s de—”
“Sh-h!”
I turned to Calpurnia but was hushed before I opened my mouth. Subdued, I
fixed my attention upon Reverend Sykes, who seemed to be waiting for me to
settle down. “Will the music superintendent lead us in the first hymn,” he said.
Zeebo rose from his pew and walked down the center aisle, stopping in front
of us and facing the congregation. He was carrying a battered hymn-book. He
opened it and said, “We’ll sing number two seventy-three.”
This was too much for me. “How’re we gonna sing it if there ain’t any hymn-
books?”
Calpurnia smiled. “Hush baby,” she whispered, “you’ll see in a minute.”
Zeebo cleared his throat and read in a voice like the rumble of distant artillery:
“There’s a land beyond the river.”
Miraculously on pitch, a hundred voices sang out Zeebo’s words. The last
syllable, held to a husky hum, was followed by Zeebo saying, “That we call the
sweet forever.”
Music again swelled around us; the last note lingered and Zeebo met it with
the next line: “And we only reach that shore by faith’s decree.”
The congregation hesitated, Zeebo repeated the line carefully, and it was sung.
At the chorus Zeebo closed the book, a signal for the congregation to proceed
without his help.
On the dying notes of “Jubilee,” Zeebo said, “In that far-off sweet forever, just
beyond the shining river.”
Line for line, voices followed in simple harmony until the hymn ended in a
melancholy murmur.
I looked at Jem, who was looking at Zeebo from the corners of his eyes. I
didn’t believe it either, but we had both heard it.
Reverend Sykes then called on the Lord to bless the sick and the suffering, a
procedure no different from our church practice, except Reverend Sykes directed
the Deity’s attention to several specific cases.
His sermon was a forthright denunciation of sin, an austere declaration of the
motto on the wall behind him: he warned his flock against the evils of heady
brews, gambling, and strange women. Bootleggers caused enough trouble in the
Quarters, but women were worse. Again, as I had often met it in my own church,
I was confronted with the Impurity of Women doctrine that seemed to preoccupy
all clergymen.
Jem and I had heard the same sermon Sunday after Sunday, with only one
exception. Reverend Sykes used his pulpit more freely to express his views on
individual lapses from grace: Jim Hardy had been absent from church for five
Sundays and he wasn’t sick; Constance Jackson had better watch her ways—she
was in grave danger for quarreling with her neighbors; she had erected the only
spite fence in the history of the Quarters.
Reverend Sykes closed his sermon. He stood beside a table in front of the
pulpit and requested the morning offering, a proceeding that was strange to Jem
and me. One by one, the congregation came forward and dropped nickels and
dimes into a black enameled coffee can. Jem and I followed suit, and received a
soft, “Thank you, thank you,” as our dimes clinked.
To our amazement, Reverend Sykes emptied the can onto the table and raked
the coins into his hand. He straightened up and said, “This is not enough, we
must have ten dollars.”
The congregation stirred. “You all know what it’s for—Helen can’t leave
those children to work while Tom’s in jail. If everybody gives one more dime,
we’ll have it—” Reverend Sykes waved his hand and called to someone in the
back of the church. “Alec, shut the doors. Nobody leaves here till we have ten
dollars.”
Calpurnia scratched in her handbag and brought forth a battered leather coin
purse. “Naw Cal,” Jem whispered, when she handed him a shiny quarter, “we
can put ours in. Gimme your dime, Scout.”
The church was becoming stuffy, and it occurred to me that Reverend Sykes
intended to sweat the amount due out of his flock. Fans crackled, feet shuffled,
tobacco-chewers were in agony.
Reverend Sykes startled me by saying sternly, “Carlow Richardson, I haven’t
seen you up this aisle yet.”
A thin man in khaki pants came up the aisle and deposited a coin. The
congregation murmured approval.
Reverend Sykes then said, “I want all of you with no children to make a
sacrifice and give one more dime apiece. Then we’ll have it.”
Slowly, painfully, the ten dollars was collected. The door was opened, and the
gust of warm air revived us. Zeebo lined On Jordan’s Stormy Banks, and church
was over.
I wanted to stay and explore, but Calpurnia propelled me up the aisle ahead of
her. At the church door, while she paused to talk with Zeebo and his family, Jem
and I chatted with Reverend Sykes. I was bursting with questions, but decided I
would wait and let Calpurnia answer them.
“We were ‘specially glad to have you all here,” said Reverend Sykes. “This
church has no better friend than your daddy.”
My curiosity burst: “Why were you all takin‘ up collection for Tom
Robinson’s wife?”
“Didn’t you hear why?” asked Reverend Sykes. “Helen’s got three little’uns
and she can’t go out to work—”
“Why can’t she take ‘em with her, Reverend?” I asked. It was customary for
field Negroes with tiny children to deposit them in whatever shade there was
while their parents worked—usually the babies sat in the shade between two
rows of cotton. Those unable to sit were strapped papoose-style on their
mothers’ backs, or resided in extra cotton bags.
Reverend Sykes hesitated. “To tell you the truth, Miss Jean Louise, Helen’s
finding it hard to get work these days . . . when it’s picking time, I think Mr.
Link Deas’ll take her.”
“Why not, Reverend?”
Before he could answer, I felt Calpurnia’s hand on my shoulder. At its
pressure I said, “We thank you for lettin‘ us come.” Jem echoed me, and we
made our way homeward.
“Cal, I know Tom Robinson’s in jail an‘ he’s done somethin’ awful, but why
won’t folks hire Helen?” I asked.
Calpurnia, in her navy voile dress and tub of a hat, walked between Jem and
me. “It’s because of what folks say Tom’s done,” she said. “Folks aren’t anxious
to—to have anything to do with any of his family.”
“Just what did he do, Cal?”
Calpurnia sighed. “Old Mr. Bob Ewell accused him of rapin‘ his girl an’ had
him arrested an‘ put in jail—”
“Mr. Ewell?” My memory stirred. “Does he have anything to do with those
Ewells that come every first day of school an‘ then go home? Why, Atticus said
they were absolute trash—I never heard Atticus talk about folks the way he
talked about the Ewells. He said—”
“Yeah, those are the ones.”
“Well, if everybody in Maycomb knows what kind of folks the Ewells are
they’d be glad to hire Helen . . . what’s rape, Cal?”
“It’s somethin‘ you’ll have to ask Mr. Finch about,” she said. “He can explain
it better than I can. You all hungry? The Reverend took a long time unwindin’
this morning, he’s not usually so tedious.”
“He’s just like our preacher,” said Jem, “but why do you all sing hymns that
way?”
“Linin‘?” she asked.
“Is that what it is?”
“Yeah, it’s called linin‘. They’ve done it that way as long as I can remember.”
Jem said it looked like they could save the collection money for a year and get
some hymn-books.
Calpurnia laughed. “Wouldn’t do any good,” she said. “They can’t read.”
“Can’t read?” I asked. “All those folks?”
“That’s right,” Calpurnia nodded. “Can’t but about four folks in First
Purchase read . . . I’m one of ‘em.”
“Where’d you go to school, Cal?” asked Jem.
“Nowhere. Let’s see now, who taught me my letters? It was Miss Maudie
Atkinson’s aunt, old Miss Buford—”
“Are you that old?”
“I’m older than Mr. Finch, even.” Calpurnia grinned. “Not sure how much,
though. We started rememberin‘ one time, trying to figure out how old I was—I
can remember back just a few years more’n he can, so I’m not much older, when
you take off the fact that men can’t remember as well as women.”
“What’s your birthday, Cal?”
“I just have it on Christmas, it’s easier to remember that way—I don’t have a
real birthday.”
“But Cal,” Jem protested, “you don’t look even near as old as Atticus.”
“Colored folks don’t show their ages so fast,” she said.
“Maybe because they can’t read. Cal, did you teach Zeebo?”
“Yeah, Mister Jem. There wasn’t a school even when he was a boy. I made
him learn, though.”
Zeebo was Calpurnia’s eldest son. If I had ever thought about it, I would have
known that Calpurnia was of mature years—Zeebo had half-grown children—
but then I had never thought about it.
“Did you teach him out of a primer, like us?” I asked.
“No, I made him get a page of the Bible every day, and there was a book Miss
Buford taught me out of—bet you don’t know where I got it,” she said.
We didn’t know.
Calpurnia said, “Your Granddaddy Finch gave it to me.”
“Were you from the Landing?” Jem asked. “You never told us that.”
“I certainly am, Mister Jem. Grew up down there between the Buford Place
and the Landin‘. I’ve spent all my days workin’ for the Finches or the Bufords,
an‘ I moved to Maycomb when your daddy and your mamma married.”
“What was the book, Cal?” I asked.
“Blackstone’s Commentaries.”
Jem was thunderstruck. “You mean you taught Zeebo outa that?”
“Why yes sir, Mister Jem.” Calpurnia timidly put her fingers to her mouth.
“They were the only books I had. Your grandaddy said Mr. Blackstone wrote
fine English—”
“That’s why you don’t talk like the rest of ‘em,” said Jem.
“The rest of who?”
“Rest of the colored folks. Cal, but you talked like they did in church . . .”
That Calpurnia led a modest double life never dawned on me. The idea that
she had a separate existence outside our household was a novel one, to say
nothing of her having command of two languages. “Cal,” I asked, “why do you
talk nigger-talk to the—to your folks when you know it’s not right?”
“Well, in the first place I’m black—”
“That doesn’t mean you hafta talk that way when you know better,” said Jem.
Calpurnia tilted her hat and scratched her head, then pressed her hat down
carefully over her ears. “It’s right hard to say,” she said. “Suppose you and Scout
talked colored-folks’ 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 neighbors? They’d think I was
puttin‘ on airs to beat Moses.”
“But Cal, you know better,” I said.
“It’s not necessary to tell all you know. It’s not ladylike—in the second place,
folks don’t like to have somebody around knowin‘ more than they do. It
aggravates ’em. You’re not gonna change any of them by talkin‘ right, they’ve
got to want to learn themselves, and when they don’t want to learn there’s
nothing you can do but keep your mouth shut or talk their language.”
“Cal, can I come to see you sometimes?”
She looked down at me. “See me, honey? You see me every day.”
“Out to your house,” I said. “Sometimes after work? Atticus can get me.”
“Any time you want to,” she said. “We’d be glad to have you.”
We were on the sidewalk by the Radley Place.
“Look on the porch yonder,” Jem said.
I looked over to the Radley Place, expecting to see its phantom occupant
sunning himself in the swing. The swing was empty.
“I mean our porch,” said Jem.
I looked down the street. Enarmored, upright, uncompromising, Aunt
Alexandra was sitting in a rocking chair exactly as if she had sat there every day
of her life.
13
"P
ut my bag in the front bedroom, Calpurnia,” was the first thing Aunt
Alexandra said. “ Jean Louise, stop scratching your head,” was the second thing
she said.
Calpurnia picked up Aunty’s heavy suitcase and opened the door. “I’ll take
it,” said Jem, and took it. I heard the suitcase hit the bedroom floor with a thump.
The sound had a dull permanence about it. “Have you come for a visit, Aunty?”
I asked. Aunt Alexandra’s visits from the Landing were rare, and she traveled in
state. She owned a bright green square Buick and a black chauffeur, both kept in
an unhealthy state of tidiness, but today they were nowhere to be seen.
“Didn’t your father tell you?” she asked.
Jem and I shook our heads.
“Probably he forgot. He’s not in yet, is he?”
“Nome, he doesn’t usually get back till late afternoon,” said Jem.
“Well, your father and I decided it was time I came to stay with you for a
while.”
“For a while” in Maycomb meant anything from three days to thirty years.
Jem and I exchanged glances.
“Jem’s growing up now and you are too,” she said to me. “We decided that it
would be best for you to have some feminine influence. It won’t be many years,
Jean Louise, before you become interested in clothes and boys—”
I could have made several answers to this: Cal’s a girl, it would be many years
before I would be interested in boys, I would never be interested in clothes . . .
but I kept quiet.
“What about Uncle Jimmy?” asked Jem. “Is he comin‘, too?”
“Oh no, he’s staying at the Landing. He’ll keep the place going.”
The moment I said, “Won’t you miss him?” I realized that this was not a
tactful question. Uncle Jimmy present or Uncle Jimmy absent made not much
difference, he never said anything. Aunt Alexandra ignored my question.
I could think of nothing else to say to her. In fact I could never think of
anything to say to her, and I sat thinking of past painful conversations between
us: How are you, Jean Louise? Fine, thank you ma’am, how are you? Very well,
thank you, what have you been doing with yourself? Nothin‘. Don’t you do
anything? Nome. Certainly you have friends? Yessum. Well what do you all do?
Nothin’.
It was plain that Aunty thought me dull in the extreme, because I once heard
her tell Atticus that I was sluggish.
There was a story behind all this, but I had no desire to extract it from her
then. Today was Sunday, and Aunt Alexandra was positively irritable on the
Lord’s Day. I guess it was her Sunday corset. She was not fat, but solid, and she
chose protective garments that drew up her bosom to giddy heights, pinched in
her waist, flared out her rear, and managed to suggest that Aunt Alexandra’s was
once an hour-glass figure. From any angle, it was formidable.
The remainder of the afternoon went by in the gentle gloom that descends
when relatives appear, but was dispelled when we heard a car turn in the
driveway. It was Atticus, home from Montgomery. Jem, forgetting his dignity,
ran with me to meet him. Jem seized his briefcase and bag, I jumped into his
arms, felt his vague dry kiss and said, “‘d you bring me a book? ’d you know
Aunty’s here?”
Atticus answered both questions in the affirmative. “How’d you like for her to
come live with us?”
I said I would like it very much, which was a lie, but one must lie under
certain circumstances and at all times when one can’t do anything about them.
“We felt it was time you children needed—well, it’s like this, Scout,” Atticus
said. “Your aunt’s doing me a favor as well as you all. I can’t stay here all day
with you, and the summer’s going to be a hot one.”
“Yes sir,” I said, not understanding a word he said. I had an idea, however,
that Aunt Alexandra’s appearance on the scene was not so much Atticus’s doing
as hers. Aunty had a way of declaring What Is Best For The Family, and I
suppose her coming to live with us was in that category.
Maycomb welcomed her. Miss Maudie Atkinson baked a Lane cake so loaded
with shinny it made me tight; Miss Stephanie Crawford had long visits with
Aunt Alexandra, consisting mostly of Miss Stephanie shaking her head and
saying, “Uh, uh, uh.” Miss Rachel next door had Aunty over for coffee in the
afternoons, and Mr. Nathan Radley went so far as to come up in the front yard
and say he was glad to see her.
When she settled in with us and life resumed its daily pace, Aunt Alexandra
seemed as if she had always lived with us. Her Missionary Society refreshments
added to her reputation as a hostess (she did not permit Calpurnia to make the
delicacies required to sustain the Society through long reports on Rice
Christians); she joined and became Secretary of the Maycomb Amanuensis
Club. To all parties present and participating in the life of the county, Aunt
Alexandra was one of the last of her kind: she had river-boat, boarding-school
manners; let any moral come along and she would uphold it; she was born in the
objective case; she was an incurable gossip. When Aunt Alexandra went to
school, self-doubt could not be found in any textbook, so she knew not its
meaning. She was never bored, and given the slightest chance she would
exercise her royal prerogative: she would arrange, advise, caution, and warn.
She never let a chance escape her to point out the shortcomings of other tribal
groups to the greater glory of our own, a habit that amused Jem rather than
annoyed him: “Aunty better watch how she talks—scratch most folks in
Maycomb and they’re kin to us.”
Aunt Alexandra, in underlining the moral of young Sam Merriweather’s
suicide, said it was caused by a morbid streak in the family. Let a sixteen-year-
old girl giggle in the choir and Aunty would say, “It just goes to show you, all
the Penfield women are flighty.” Everybody in Maycomb, it seemed, had a
Streak: a Drinking Streak, a Gambling Streak, a Mean Streak, a Funny Streak.
Once, when Aunty assured us that Miss Stephanie Crawford’s tendency to
mind other people’s business was hereditary, Atticus said, “Sister, when you
stop to think about it, our generation’s practically the first in the Finch family
not to marry its cousins. Would you say the Finches have an Incestuous Streak?”
Aunty said no, that’s where we got our small hands and feet.
I never understood her preoccupation with heredity. Somewhere, I had
received the impression that Fine Folks were people who did the best they could
with the sense they had, but Aunt Alexandra was of the opinion, obliquely
expressed, that the longer a family had been squatting on one patch of land the
finer it was.
“That makes the Ewells fine folks, then,” said Jem. The tribe of which Burris
Ewell and his brethren consisted had lived on the same plot of earth behind the
Maycomb dump, and had thrived on county welfare money for three
generations.
Aunt Alexandra’s theory had something behind it, though. Maycomb was an
ancient town. It was twenty miles east of Finch’s Landing, awkwardly inland for
such an old town. But Maycomb would have been closer to the river had it not
been for the nimble-wittedness of one Sinkfield, who in the dawn of history
operated an inn where two pig-trails met, the only tavern in the territory.
Sinkfield, no patriot, served and supplied ammunition to Indians and settlers
alike, neither knowing or caring whether he was a part of the Alabama Territory
or the Creek Nation so long as business was good. Business was excellent when
Governor William Wyatt Bibb, with a view to promoting the newly created
county’s domestic tranquility, dispatched a team of surveyors to locate its exact
center and there establish its seat of government. The surveyors, Sinkfield’s
guests, told their host that he was in the territorial confines of Maycomb County,
and showed him the probable spot where the county seat would be built. Had not
Sinkfield made a bold stroke to preserve his holdings, Maycomb would have sat
in the middle of Winston Swamp, a place totally devoid of interest. Instead,
Maycomb grew and sprawled out from its hub, Sinkfield’s Tavern, because
Sinkfield reduced his guests to myopic drunkenness one evening, induced them
to bring forward their maps and charts, lop off a little here, add a bit there, and
adjust the center of the county to meet his requirements. He sent them packing
next day armed with their charts and five quarts of shinny in their saddlebags—
two apiece and one for the Governor.
Because its primary reason for existence was government, Maycomb was
spared the grubbiness that distinguished most Alabama towns its size. In the
beginning its buildings were solid, its courthouse proud, its streets graciously
wide. Maycomb’s proportion of professional people ran high: one went there to
have his teeth pulled, his wagon fixed, his heart listened to, his money deposited,
his soul saved, his mules vetted. But the ultimate wisdom of Sinkfield’s
maneuver is open to question. He placed the young town too far away from the
only kind of public transportation in those days—river-boat—and it took a man
from the north end of the county two days to travel to Maycomb for store-bought
goods. As a result the town remained the same size for a hundred years, an
island in a patchwork sea of cottonfields and timberland.
Although Maycomb was ignored during the War Between the States,
Reconstruction rule and economic ruin forced the town to grow. It grew inward.
New people so rarely settled there, the same families married the same families
until the members of the community looked faintly alike. Occasionally someone
would return from Montgomery or Mobile with an outsider, but the result caused
only a ripple in the quiet stream of family resemblance. Things were more or
less the same during my early years.
There was indeed a caste system in Maycomb, but to my mind it worked this
way: the older citizens, the present generation of people who had lived side by
side for years and years, were utterly predictable to one another: they took for
granted attitudes, character shadings, even gestures, as having been repeated in
each generation and refined by time. Thus the dicta No Crawford Minds His
Own Business, Every Third Merriweather Is Morbid, The Truth Is Not in the
Delafields, All the Bufords Walk Like That, were simply guides to daily living:
never take a check from a Delafield without a discreet call to the bank; Miss
Maudie Atkinson’s shoulder stoops because she was a Buford; if Mrs. Grace
Merriweather sips gin out of Lydia E. Pinkham bottles it’s nothing unusual—her
mother did the same.
Aunt Alexandra fitted into the world of Maycomb like a hand into a glove, but
never into the world of Jem and me. I so often wondered how she could be
Atticus’s and Uncle Jack’s sister that I revived half-remembered tales of
changelings and mandrake roots that Jem had spun long ago.
These were abstract speculations for the first month of her stay, as she had
little to say to Jem or me, and we saw her only at mealtimes and at night before
we went to bed. It was summer and we were outdoors. Of course some
afternoons when I would run inside for a drink of water, I would find the
livingroom overrun with Maycomb ladies, sipping, whispering, fanning, and I
would be called: “Jean Louise, come speak to these ladies.”
When I appeared in the doorway, Aunty would look as if she regretted her
request; I was usually mud-splashed or covered with sand.
“Speak to your Cousin Lily,” she said one afternoon, when she had trapped
me in the hall.
“Who?” I said.
“Your Cousin Lily Brooke,” said Aunt Alexandra.
“She our cousin? I didn’t know that.”
Aunt Alexandra managed to smile in a way that conveyed a gentle apology to
Cousin Lily and firm disapproval to me. When Cousin Lily Brooke left I knew I
was in for it.
It was a sad thing that my father had neglected to tell me about the Finch
Family, or to install any pride into his children. She summoned Jem, who sat
warily on the sofa beside me. She left the room and returned with a purple-
covered book on which Meditations of Joshua S. St. Clair was stamped in gold.
“Your cousin wrote this,” said Aunt Alexandra. “He was a beautiful
character.”
Jem examined the small volume. “Is this the Cousin Joshua who was locked
up for so long?”
Aunt Alexandra said, “How did you know that?”
“Why, Atticus said he went round the bend at the University. Said he tried to
shoot the president. Said Cousin Joshua said he wasn’t anything but a sewer-
inspector and tried to shoot him with an old flintlock pistol, only it just blew up
in his hand. Atticus said it cost the family five hundred dollars to get him out of
that one—”
Aunt Alexandra was standing stiff as a stork. “That’s all,” she said. “We’ll see
about this.”
Before bedtime I was in Jem’s room trying to borrow a book, when Atticus
knocked and entered. He sat on the side of Jem’s bed, looked at us soberly, then
he grinned.
“Er—h’rm,“ he said. He was beginning to preface some things he said with a
throaty noise, and I thought he must at last be getting old, but he looked the
same. ”I don’t exactly know how to say this,“ he began.
“Well, just say it,” said Jem. “Have we done something?”
Our father was actually fidgeting. “No, I just want to explain to you that—
your Aunt Alexandra asked me . . . son, you know you’re a Finch, don’t you?”
“That’s what I’ve been told.” Jem looked out of the corners of his eyes. His
voice rose uncontrollably, “Atticus, what’s the matter?”
Atticus crossed his knees and folded his arms. “I’m trying to tell you the facts
of life.”
Jem’s disgust deepened. “I know all that stuff,” he said.
Atticus suddenly grew serious. In his lawyer’s voice, without a shade of
inflection, he said: “Your aunt has asked me to try and impress upon you and
Jean Louise that you are not from run-of-the-mill people, that you are the
product of several generations’ gentle breeding—” Atticus paused, watching me
locate an elusive redbug on my leg.
“Gentle breeding,” he continued, when I had found and scratched it, “and that
you should try to live up to your name—” Atticus persevered in spite of us: “She
asked me to tell you you must try to behave like the little lady and gentleman
that you are. She wants to talk to you about the family and what it’s meant to
Maycomb County through the years, so you’ll have some idea of who you are,
so you might be moved to behave accordingly,” he concluded at a gallop.
Stunned, Jem and I looked at each other, then at Atticus, whose collar seemed
to worry him. We did not speak to him.
Presently I picked up a comb from Jem’s dresser and ran its teeth along the
edge.
“Stop that noise,” Atticus said.
His curtness stung me. The comb was midway in its journey, and I banged it
down. For no reason I felt myself beginning to cry, but I could not stop. This
was not my father. My father never thought these thoughts. My father never
spoke so. Aunt Alexandra had put him up to this, somehow. Through my tears I
saw Jem standing in a similar pool of isolation, his head cocked to one side.
There was nowhere to go, but I turned to go and met Atticus’s vest front. I
buried my head in it and listened to the small internal noises that went on behind
the light blue cloth: his watch ticking, the faint crackle of his starched shirt, the
soft sound of his breathing.
“Your stomach’s growling,” I said.
“I know it,” he said.
“You better take some soda.”
“I will,” he said.
“Atticus, is all this behavin‘ an’ stuff gonna make things different? I mean are
you—?”
I felt his hand on the back of my head. “Don’t you worry about anything,” he
said. “It’s not time to worry.” When I heard that, I knew he had come back to us.
The blood in my legs began to flow again, and I raised my head. “You really
want us to do all that? I can’t remember everything Finches are supposed to do .
. .”
“I don’t want you to remember it. Forget it.”
He went to the door and out of the room, shutting the door behind him. He
nearly slammed it, but caught himself at the last minute and closed it softly. As
Jem and I stared, the door opened again and Atticus peered around. His
eyebrows were raised, his glasses had slipped. “Get more like Cousin Joshua
every day, don’t I? Do you think I’ll end up costing the family five hundred
dollars?”
I know now what he was trying to do, but Atticus was only a man. It takes a
woman to do that kind of work.
14
A
lthough we heard no more about the Finch family from Aunt Alexandra, we
heard plenty from the town. On Saturdays, armed with our nickels, when Jem
permitted me to accompany him (he was now positively allergic to my presence
when in public), we would squirm our way through sweating sidewalk crowds
and sometimes hear, “There’s his chillun,” or, “Yonder’s some Finches.”
Turning to face our accusers, we would see only a couple of farmers studying
the enema bags in the Mayco Drugstore window. Or two dumpy countrywomen
in straw hats sitting in a Hoover cart.
“They c’n go loose and rape up the countryside for all of ‘em who run this
county care,” was one obscure observation we met head on from a skinny
gentleman when he passed us. Which reminded me that I had a question to ask
Atticus.
“What’s rape?” I asked him that night.
Atticus looked around from behind his paper. He was in his chair by the
window. As we grew older, Jem and I thought it generous to allow Atticus thirty
minutes to himself after supper.
He sighed, and said rape was carnal knowledge of a female by force and
without consent.
“Well if that’s all it is why did Calpurnia dry me up when I asked her what it
was?”
Atticus looked pensive. “What’s that again?”
“Well, I asked Calpurnia comin‘ from church that day what it was and she
said ask you but I forgot to and now I’m askin’ you.”
His paper was now in his lap. “Again, please,” he said.
I told him in detail about our trip to church with Calpurnia. Atticus seemed to
enjoy it, but Aunt Alexandra, who was sitting in a corner quietly sewing, put
down her embroidery and stared at us.
“You all were coming back from Calpurnia’s church that Sunday?”
Jem said, “Yessum, she took us.”
I remembered something. “Yessum, and she promised me I could come out to
her house some afternoon. Atticus. I’ll go next Sunday if it’s all right, can I? Cal
said she’d come get me if you were off in the car.”
“You may not.”
Aunt Alexandra said it. I wheeled around, startled, then turned back to Atticus
in time to catch his swift glance at her, but it was too late. I said, “I didn’t ask
you!”
For a big man, Atticus could get up and down from a chair faster than anyone
I ever knew. He was on his feet. “Apologize to your aunt,” he said.
“I didn’t ask her, I asked you—”
Atticus turned his head and pinned me to the wall with his good eye. His voice
was deadly: “First, apologize to your aunt.”
“I’m sorry, Aunty,” I muttered.
“Now then,” he said. “Let’s get this clear: you do as Calpurnia tells you, you
do as I tell you, and as long as your aunt’s in this house, you will do as she tells
you. Understand?”
I understood, pondered a while, and concluded that the only way I could retire
with a shred of dignity was to go to the bathroom, where I stayed long enough to
make them think I had to go. Returning, I lingered in the hall to hear a fierce
discussion going on in the livingroom. Through the door I could see Jem on the
sofa with a football magazine in front of his face, his head turning as if its pages
contained a live tennis match.
“. . . you’ve got to do something about her,” Aunty was saying. “You’ve let
things go on too long, Atticus, too long.”
“I don’t see any harm in letting her go out there. Cal’d look after her there as
well as she does here.”
Who was the “her” they were talking about? My heart sank: me. I felt the
starched walls of a pink cotton penitentiary closing in on me, and for the second
time in my life I thought of running away. Immediately.
“Atticus, it’s all right to be soft-hearted, you’re an easy man, but you have a
daughter to think of. A daughter who’s growing up.”
“That’s what I am thinking of.”
“And don’t try to get around it. You’ve got to face it sooner or later and it
might as well be tonight. We don’t need her now.”
Atticus’s voice was even: “Alexandra, Calpurnia’s not leaving this house until
she wants to. You may think otherwise, but I couldn’t have got along without her
all these years. She’s a faithful member of this family and you’ll simply have to
accept things the way they are. Besides, sister, I don’t want you working your
head off for us—you’ve no reason to do that. We still need Cal as much as we
ever did.”
“But Atticus—”
“Besides, I don’t think the children’ve suffered one bit from her having
brought them up. If anything, she’s been harder on them in some ways than a
mother would have been . . . she’s never let them get away with anything, she’s
never indulged them the way most colored nurses do. She tried to bring them up
according to her lights, and Cal’s lights are pretty good—and another thing, the
children love her.”
I breathed again. It wasn’t me, it was only Calpurnia they were talking about.
Revived, I entered the livingroom. Atticus had retreated behind his newspaper
and Aunt Alexandra was worrying her embroidery. Punk, punk, punk, her needle
broke the taut circle. She stopped, and pulled the cloth tighter: punk-punk-punk.
She was furious.
Jem got up and padded across the rug. He motioned me to follow. He led me
to his room and closed the door. His face was grave.
“They’ve been fussing, Scout.”
Jem and I fussed a great deal these days, but I had never heard of or seen
anyone quarrel with Atticus. It was not a comfortable sight.
“Scout, try not to antagonize Aunty, hear?”
Atticus’s remarks were still rankling, which made me miss the request in
Jem’s question. My feathers rose again. “You tryin‘ to tell me what to do?”
“Naw, it’s—he’s got a lot on his mind now, without us worrying him.”
“Like what?” Atticus didn’t appear to have anything especially on his mind.
“It’s this Tom Robinson case that’s worryin‘ him to death—”
I said Atticus didn’t worry about anything. Besides, the case never bothered us
except about once a week and then it didn’t last.
“That’s because you can’t hold something in your mind but a little while,”
said Jem. “It’s different with grown folks, we—”
His maddening superiority was unbearable these days. He didn’t want to do
anything but read and go off by himself. Still, everything he read he passed
along to me, but with this difference: formerly, because he thought I’d like it;
now, for my edification and instruction.
“Jee crawling hova, Jem! Who do you think you are?”
“Now I mean it, Scout, you antagonize Aunty and I’ll—I’ll spank you.”
With that, I was gone. “You damn morphodite, I’ll kill you!” He was sitting
on the bed, and it was easy to grab his front hair and land one on his mouth. He
slapped me and I tried another left, but a punch in the stomach sent me sprawling
on the floor. It nearly knocked the breath out of me, but it didn’t matter because I
knew he was fighting, he was fighting me back. We were still equals.
“Ain’t so high and mighty now, are you!” I screamed, sailing in again. He was
still on the bed and I couldn’t get a firm stance, so I threw myself at him as hard
as I could, hitting, pulling, pinching, gouging. What had begun as a fist-fight
became a brawl. We were still struggling when Atticus separated us.
“That’s all,” he said. “Both of you go to bed right now.”
“Taah!” I said at Jem. He was being sent to bed at my bedtime.
“Who started it?” asked Atticus, in resignation.
“Jem did. He was tryin‘ to tell me what to do. I don’t have to mind him now,
do I?”
Atticus smiled. “Let’s leave it at this: you mind Jem whenever he can make
you. Fair enough?”
Aunt Alexandra was present but silent, and when she went down the hall with
Atticus we heard her say, “. . . just one of the things I’ve been telling you about,”
a phrase that united us again.
Ours were adjoining rooms; as I shut the door between them Jem said, “Night,
Scout.”
“Night,” I murmured, picking my way across the room to turn on the light. As
I passed the bed I stepped on something warm, resilient, and rather smooth. It
was not quite like hard rubber, and I had the sensation that it was alive. I also
heard it move.
I switched on the light and looked at the floor by the bed. Whatever I had
stepped on was gone. I tapped on Jem’s door.
“What,” he said.
“How does a snake feel?”
“Sort of rough. Cold. Dusty. Why?”
“I think there’s one under my bed. Can you come look?”
“Are you bein‘ funny?” Jem opened the door. He was in his pajama bottoms. I
noticed not without satisfaction that the mark of my knuckles was still on his
mouth. When he saw I meant what I said, he said, “If you think I’m gonna put
my face down to a snake you’ve got another think comin’. Hold on a minute.”
He went to the kitchen and fetched the broom. “You better get up on the bed,”
he said.
“You reckon it’s really one?” I asked. This was an occasion. Our houses had
no cellars; they were built on stone blocks a few feet above the ground, and the
entry of reptiles was not unknown but was not commonplace. Miss Rachel
Haverford’s excuse for a glass of neat whiskey every morning was that she never
got over the fright of finding a rattler coiled in her bedroom closet, on her
washing, when she went to hang up her negligee.
Jem made a tentative swipe under the bed. I looked over the foot to see if a
snake would come out. None did. Jem made a deeper swipe.
“Do snakes grunt?”
“It ain’t a snake,” Jem said. “It’s somebody.”
Suddenly a filthy brown package shot from under the bed. Jem raised the
broom and missed Dill’s head by an inch when it appeared.
“God Almighty.” Jem’s voice was reverent.
We watched Dill emerge by degrees. He was a tight fit. He stood up and eased
his shoulders, turned his feet in their ankle sockets, rubbed the back of his neck.
His circulation restored, he said, “Hey.”
Jem petitioned God again. I was speechless.
“I’m ‘bout to perish,” said Dill. “Got anything to eat?”
In a dream, I went to the kitchen. I brought him back some milk and half a pan
of corn bread left over from supper. Dill devoured it, chewing with his front
teeth, as was his custom.
I finally found my voice. “How’d you get here?”
By an involved route. Refreshed by food, Dill recited this narrative: having
been bound in chains and left to die in the basement (there were basements in
Meridian) by his new father, who disliked him, and secretly kept alive on raw
field peas by a passing farmer who heard his cries for help (the good man poked
a bushel pod by pod through the ventilator), Dill worked himself free by pulling
the chains from the wall. Still in wrist manacles, he wandered two miles out of
Meridian where he discovered a small animal show and was immediately
engaged to wash the camel. He traveled with the show all over Mississippi until
his infallible sense of direction told him he was in Abbott County, Alabama, just
across the river from Maycomb. He walked the rest of the way.
“How’d you get here?” asked Jem.
He had taken thirteen dollars from his mother’s purse, caught the nine o’clock
from Meridian and got off at Maycomb Junction. He had walked ten or eleven of
the fourteen miles to Maycomb, off the highway in the scrub bushes lest the
authorities be seeking him, and had ridden the remainder of the way clinging to
the backboard of a cotton wagon. He had been under the bed for two hours, he
thought; he had heard us in the diningroom, and the clink of forks on plates
nearly drove him crazy. He thought Jem and I would never go to bed; he had
considered emerging and helping me beat Jem, as Jem had grown far taller, but
he knew Mr. Finch would break it up soon, so he thought it best to stay where he
was. He was worn out, dirty beyond belief, and home.
“They must not know you’re here,” said Jem. “We’d know if they were
lookin‘ for you . . .”
“Think they’re still searchin‘ all the picture shows in Meridian.” Dill grinned.
“You oughta let your mother know where you are,” said Jem. “You oughta let
her know you’re here . . .”
Dill’s eyes flickered at Jem, and Jem looked at the floor. Then he rose and
broke the remaining code of our childhood. He went out of the room and down
the hall. “Atticus,” his voice was distant, “can you come here a minute, sir?”
Beneath its sweat-streaked dirt Dill’s face went white. I felt sick. Atticus was
in the doorway.
He came to the middle of the room and stood with his hands in his pockets,
looking down at Dill.
I finally found my voice: “It’s okay, Dill. When he wants you to know
somethin‘, he tells you.”
Dill looked at me. “I mean it’s all right,” I said. “You know he wouldn’t
bother you, you know you ain’t scared of Atticus.”
“I’m not scared . . .” Dill muttered.
“Just hungry, I’ll bet.” Atticus’s voice had its usual pleasant dryness. “Scout,
we can do better than a pan of cold corn bread, can’t we? You fill this fellow up
and when I get back we’ll see what we can see.”
“Mr. Finch, don’t tell Aunt Rachel, don’t make me go back, please sir! I’ll run
off again—!”
“Whoa, son,” said Atticus. “Nobody’s about to make you go anywhere but to
bed pretty soon. I’m just going over to tell Miss Rachel you’re here and ask her
if you could spend the night with us—you’d like that, wouldn’t you? And for
goodness’ sake put some of the county back where it belongs, the soil erosion’s
bad enough as it is.”
Dill stared at my father’s retreating figure.
“He’s tryin‘ to be funny,” I said. “He means take a bath. See there, I told you
he wouldn’t bother you.”
Jem was standing in a corner of the room, looking like the traitor he was.
“Dill, I had to tell him,” he said. “You can’t run three hundred miles off without
your mother knowin‘.”
We left him without a word.
Dill ate, and ate, and ate. He hadn’t eaten since last night. He used all his
money for a ticket, boarded the train as he had done many times, coolly chatted
with the conductor, to whom Dill was a familiar sight, but he had not the nerve
to invoke the rule on small children traveling a distance alone if you’ve lost your
money the conductor will lend you enough for dinner and your father will pay
him back at the end of the line.
Dill made his way through the leftovers and was reaching for a can of pork
and beans in the pantry when Miss Rachel’s Do-oo Je-sus went off in the hall.
He shivered like a rabbit.
He bore with fortitude her Wait Till I Get You Home, Your Folks Are Out of
Their Minds Worryin‘, was quite calm during That’s All the Harris in You
Coming Out, smiled at her Reckon You Can Stay One Night, and returned the
hug at long last bestowed upon him.
Atticus pushed up his glasses and rubbed his face.
“Your father’s tired,” said Aunt Alexandra, her first words in hours, it seemed.
She had been there, but I suppose struck dumb most of the time. “You children
get to bed now.”
We left them in the diningroom, Atticus still mopping his face. “From rape to
riot to runaways,” we heard him chuckle. “I wonder what the next two hours will
bring.”
Since things appeared to have worked out pretty well, Dill and I decided to be
civil to Jem. Besides, Dill had to sleep with him so we might as well speak to
him.
I put on my pajamas, read for a while and found myself suddenly unable to
keep my eyes open. Dill and Jem were quiet; when I turned off my reading lamp
there was no strip of light under the door to Jem’s room.
I must have slept a long time, for when I was punched awake the room was
dim with the light of the setting moon.
“Move over, Scout.”
“He thought he had to,” I mumbled. “Don’t stay mad with him.”
Dill got in bed beside me. “I ain’t,” he said. “I just wanted to sleep with you.
Are you waked up?”
By this time I was, but lazily so. “Why’d you do it?”
No answer. “I said why’d you run off? Was he really hateful like you said?”
“Naw . . .”
“Didn’t you all build that boat like you wrote you were gonna?”
“He just said we would. We never did.”
I raised up on my elbow, facing Dill’s outline. “It’s no reason to run off. They
don’t get around to doin‘ what they say they’re gonna do half the time . . .”
“That wasn’t it, he—they just wasn’t interested in me.”
This was the weirdest reason for flight I had ever heard. “How come?”
“Well, they stayed gone all the time, and when they were home, even, they’d
get off in a room by themselves.”
“What’d they do in there?”
“Nothin‘, just sittin’ and readin‘—but they didn’t want me with ’em.”
I pushed the pillow to the headboard and sat up. “You know something? I was
fixin‘ to run off tonight because there they all were. You don’t want ’em around
you all the time, Dill—”
Dill breathed his patient breath, a half-sigh.
“—good night, Atticus’s gone all day and sometimes half the night and off in
the legislature and I don’t know what—you don’t want ‘em around all the time,
Dill, you couldn’t do anything if they were.”
“That’s not it.”
As Dill explained, I found myself wondering what life would be if Jem were
different, even from what he was now; what I would do if Atticus did not feel
the necessity of my presence, help and advice. Why, he couldn’t get along a day
without me. Even Calpurnia couldn’t get along unless I was there. They needed
me.
“Dill, you ain’t telling me right—your folks couldn’t do without you. They
must be just mean to you. Tell you what to do about that—”
Dill’s voice went on steadily in the darkness: “The thing is, what I’m tryin‘ to
say is—they do get on a lot better without me, I can’t help them any. They ain’t
mean. They buy me everything I want, but it’s now—you’ve-got-it-go-play-
with-it. You’ve got a roomful of things. I-got-you-that-book-so-go-read-it.” Dill
tried to deepen his voice. “You’re not a boy. Boys get out and play baseball with
other boys, they don’t hang around the house worryin’ their folks.”
Dill’s voice was his own again: “Oh, they ain’t mean. They kiss you and hug
you good night and good mornin‘ and good-bye and tell you they love you—
Scout, let’s get us a baby.”
“Where?”
There was a man Dill had heard of who had a boat that he rowed across to a
foggy island where all these babies were; you could order one—
“That’s a lie. Aunty said God drops ‘em down the chimney. At least that’s
what I think she said.” For once, Aunty’s diction had not been too clear.
“Well that ain’t so. You get babies from each other. But there’s this man, too
—he has all these babies just waitin‘ to wake up, he breathes life into ’em . . .”
Dill was off again. Beautiful things floated around in his dreamy head. He
could read two books to my one, but he preferred the magic of his own
inventions. He could add and subtract faster than lightning, but he preferred his
own twilight world, a world where babies slept, waiting to be gathered like
morning lilies. He was slowly talking himself to sleep and taking me with him,
but in the quietness of his foggy island there rose the faded image of a gray
house with sad brown doors.
“Dill?”
“Mm?”
“Why do you reckon Boo Radley’s never run off?”
Dill sighed a long sigh and turned away from me.
“Maybe he doesn’t have anywhere to run off to . . .”
15
A
fter many telephone calls, much pleading on behalf of the defendant, and a
long forgiving letter from his mother, it was decided that Dill could stay. We had
a week of peace together. After that, little, it seemed. A nightmare was upon us.
It began one evening after supper. Dill was over; Aunt Alexandra was in her
chair in the corner, Atticus was in his; Jem and I were on the floor reading. It
had been a placid week: I had minded Aunty; Jem had outgrown the treehouse,
but helped Dill and me construct a new rope ladder for it; Dill had hit upon a
foolproof plan to make Boo Radley come out at no cost to ourselves (place a
trail of lemon drops from the back door to the front yard and he’d follow it, like
an ant). There was a knock on the front door, Jem answered it and said it was
Mr. Heck Tate.
“Well, ask him to come in,” said Atticus.
“I already did. There’s some men outside in the yard, they want you to come
out.”
In Maycomb, grown men stood outside in the front yard for only two reasons:
death and politics. I wondered who had died. Jem and I went to the front door,
but Atticus called, “Go back in the house.”
Jem turned out the livingroom lights and pressed his nose to a window screen.
Aunt Alexandra protested. “Just for a second, Aunty, let’s see who it is,” he said.
Dill and I took another window. A crowd of men was standing around Atticus.
They all seemed to be talking at once.
“. . . movin‘ him to the county jail tomorrow,” Mr. Tate was saying, “I don’t
look for any trouble, but I can’t guarantee there won’t be any . . .”
“Don’t be foolish, Heck,” Atticus said. “This is Maycomb.”
“. . . said I was just uneasy.”
“Heck, we’ve gotten one postponement of this case just to make sure there’s
nothing to be uneasy about. This is Saturday,” Atticus said. “Trial’ll probably be
Monday. You can keep him one night, can’t you? I don’t think anybody in
Maycomb’ll begrudge me a client, with times this hard.”
There was a murmur of glee that died suddenly when Mr. Link Deas said,
“Nobody around here’s up to anything, it’s that Old Sarum bunch I’m worried
about . . . can’t you get a—what is it, Heck?”
“Change of venue,” said Mr. Tate. “Not much point in that, now is it?”
Atticus said something inaudible. I turned to Jem, who waved me to silence.
“—besides,” Atticus was saying, “you’re not scared of that crowd, are you?”
“. . . know how they do when they get shinnied up.”
“They don’t usually drink on Sunday, they go to church most of the day . . .”
Atticus said.
“This is a special occasion, though . . .” someone said.
They murmured and buzzed until Aunty said if Jem didn’t turn on the
livingroom lights he would disgrace the family. Jem didn’t hear her.
“—don’t see why you touched it in the first place,” Mr. Link Deas was saying.
“You’ve got everything to lose from this, Atticus. I mean everything.”
“Do you really think so?”
This was Atticus’s dangerous question. “Do you really think you want to
move there, Scout?” Bam, bam, bam, and the checkerboard was swept clean of
my men. “Do you really think that, son? Then read this.” Jem would struggle the
rest of an evening through the speeches of Henry W. Grady.
“Link, that boy might go to the chair, but he’s not going till the truth’s told.”
Atticus’s voice was even. “And you know what the truth is.”
There was a murmur among the group of men, made more ominous when
Atticus moved back to the bottom front step and the men drew nearer to him.
Suddenly Jem screamed, “Atticus, the telephone’s ringing!”
The men jumped a little and scattered; they were people we saw every day:
merchants, in-town farmers; Dr. Reynolds was there; so was Mr. Avery.
“Well, answer it, son,” called Atticus.
Laughter broke them up. When Atticus switched on the overhead light in the
livingroom he found Jem at the window, pale except for the vivid mark of the
screen on his nose.
“Why on earth are you all sitting in the dark?” he asked.
Jem watched him go to his chair and pick up the evening paper. I sometimes
think Atticus subjected every crisis of his life to tranquil evaluation behind The
Mobile Register, The Birmingham News and The Montgomery Advertiser.
“They were after you, weren’t they?” Jem went to him. “They wanted to get
you, didn’t they?”
Atticus lowered the paper and gazed at Jem. “What have you been reading?”
he asked. Then he said gently, “No son, those were our friends.”
“It wasn’t a—a gang?” Jem was looking from the corners of his eyes.
Atticus tried to stifle a smile but didn’t make it. “No, we don’t have mobs and
that nonsense in Maycomb. I’ve never heard of a gang in Maycomb.”
“Ku Klux got after some Catholics one time.”
“Never heard of any Catholics in Maycomb either,” said Atticus, “you’re
confusing that with something else. Way back about nineteen-twenty there was a
Klan, but it was a political organization more than anything. Besides, they
couldn’t find anybody to scare. They paraded by Mr. Sam Levy’s house one
night, but Sam just stood on his porch and told ‘em things had come to a pretty
pass, he’d sold ’em the very sheets on their backs. Sam made ‘em so ashamed of
themselves they went away.”
The Levy family met all criteria for being Fine Folks: they did the best they
could with the sense they had, and they had been living on the same plot of
ground in Maycomb for five generations.
“The Ku Klux’s gone,” said Atticus. “It’ll never come back.”
I walked home with Dill and returned in time to overhear Atticus saying to
Aunty, “. . . in favor of Southern womanhood as much as anybody, but not for
preserving polite fiction at the expense of human life,” a pronouncement that
made me suspect they had been fussing again.
I sought Jem and found him in his room, on the bed deep in thought. “Have
they been at it?” I asked.
“Sort of. She won’t let him alone about Tom Robinson. She almost said
Atticus was disgracin‘ the family. Scout . . . I’m scared.”
“Scared’a what?”
“Scared about Atticus. Somebody might hurt him.” Jem preferred to remain
mysterious; all he would say to my questions was go on and leave him alone.
Next day was Sunday. In the interval between Sunday School and Church
when the congregation stretched its legs, I saw Atticus standing in the yard with
another knot of men. Mr. Heck Tate was present, and I wondered if he had seen
the light. He never went to church. Even Mr. Underwood was there. Mr.
Underwood had no use for any organization but The Maycomb Tribune, of
which he was the sole owner, editor, and printer. His days were spent at his
linotype, where he refreshed himself occasionally from an ever-present gallon
jug of cherry wine. He rarely gathered news; people brought it to him. It was
said that he made up every edition of The Maycomb Tribune out of his own head
and wrote it down on the linotype. This was believable. Something must have
been up to haul Mr. Underwood out.
I caught Atticus coming in the door, and he said that they’d moved Tom
Robinson to the Maycomb jail. He also said, more to himself than to me, that if
they’d kept him there in the first place there wouldn’t have been any fuss. I
watched him take his seat on the third row from the front, and I heard him
rumble, “Nearer my God to thee,” some notes behind the rest of us. He never sat
with Aunty, Jem and me. He liked to be by himself in church.
The fake peace that prevailed on Sundays was made more irritating by Aunt
Alexandra’s presence. Atticus would flee to his office directly after dinner,
where if we sometimes looked in on him, we would find him sitting back in his
swivel chair reading. Aunt Alexandra composed herself for a two-hour nap and
dared us to make any noise in the yard, the neighborhood was resting. Jem in his
old age had taken to his room with a stack of football magazines. So Dill and I
spent our Sundays creeping around in Deer’s Pasture.
Shooting on Sundays was prohibited, so Dill and I kicked Jem’s football
around the pasture for a while, which was no fun. Dill asked if I’d like to have a
poke at Boo Radley. I said I didn’t think it’d be nice to bother him, and spent the
rest of the afternoon filling Dill in on last winter’s events. He was considerably
impressed.
We parted at suppertime, and after our meal Jem and I were settling down to a
routine evening, when Atticus did something that interested us: he came into the
livingroom carrying a long electrical extension cord. There was a light bulb on
the end.
“I’m going out for a while,” he said. “You folks’ll be in bed when I come
back, so I’ll say good night now.”
With that, he put his hat on and went out the back door.
“He’s takin‘ the car,” said Jem.
Our father had a few peculiarities: one was, he never ate desserts; another was
that he liked to walk. As far back as I could remember, there was always a
Chevrolet in excellent condition in the carhouse, and Atticus put many miles on
it in business trips, but in Maycomb he walked to and from his office four times
a day, covering about two miles. He said his only exercise was walking. In
Maycomb, if one went for a walk with no definite purpose in mind, it was
correct to believe one’s mind incapable of definite purpose.
Later on, I bade my aunt and brother good night and was well into a book
when I heard Jem rattling around in his room. His go-to-bed noises were so
familiar to me that I knocked on his door: “Why ain’t you going to bed?”
“I’m goin‘ downtown for a while.” He was changing his pants.
“Why? It’s almost ten o’clock, Jem.”
He knew it, but he was going anyway.
“Then I’m goin‘ with you. If you say no you’re not, I’m goin’ anyway, hear?”
Jem saw that he would have to fight me to keep me home, and I suppose he
thought a fight would antagonize Aunty, so he gave in with little grace.
I dressed quickly. We waited until Aunty’s light went out, and we walked
quietly down the back steps. There was no moon tonight.
“Dill’ll wanta come,” I whispered.
“So he will,” said Jem gloomily.
We leaped over the driveway wall, cut through Miss Rachel’s side yard and
went to Dill’s window. Jem whistled bob-white. Dill’s face appeared at the
screen, disappeared, and five minutes later he unhooked the screen and crawled
out. An old campaigner, he did not speak until we were on the sidewalk.
“What’s up?”
“Jem’s got the look-arounds,” an affliction Calpurnia said all boys caught at
his age.
“I’ve just got this feeling,” Jem said, “just this feeling.”
We went by Mrs. Dubose’s house, standing empty and shuttered, her
camellias grown up in weeds and johnson grass. There were eight more houses
to the post office corner.
The south side of the square was deserted. Giant monkey-puzzle bushes
bristled on each corner, and between them an iron hitching rail glistened under
the street lights. A light shone in the county toilet, otherwise that side of the
courthouse was dark. A larger square of stores surrounded the courthouse
square; dim lights burned from deep within them.
Atticus’s office was in the courthouse when he began his law practice, but
after several years of it he moved to quieter quarters in the Maycomb Bank
building. When we rounded the corner of the square, we saw the car parked in
front of the bank. “He’s in there,” said Jem.
But he wasn’t. His office was reached by a long hallway. Looking down the
hall, we should have seen Atticus Finch, Attorney-at-Law in small sober letters
against the light from behind his door. It was dark.
Jem peered in the bank door to make sure. He turned the knob. The door was
locked. “Let’s go up the street. Maybe he’s visitin‘ Mr. Underwood.”
Mr. Underwood not only ran The Maycomb Tribune office, he lived in it. That
is, above it. He covered the courthouse and jailhouse news simply by looking out
his upstairs window. The office building was on the northwest corner of the
square, and to reach it we had to pass the jail.
The Maycomb jail was the most venerable and hideous of the county’s
buildings. Atticus said it was like something Cousin Joshua St. Clair might have
designed. It was certainly someone’s dream. Starkly out of place in a town of
square-faced stores and steep-roofed houses, the Maycomb jail was a miniature
Gothic joke one cell wide and two cells high, complete with tiny battlements and
flying buttresses. Its fantasy was heightened by its red brick facade and the thick
steel bars at its ecclesiastical windows. It stood on no lonely hill, but was
wedged between Tyndal’s Hardware Store and The Maycomb Tribune office.
The jail was Maycomb’s only conversation piece: its detractors said it looked
like a Victorian privy; its supporters said it gave the town a good solid
respectable look, and no stranger would ever suspect that it was full of niggers.
As we walked up the sidewalk, we saw a solitary light burning in the distance.
“That’s funny,” said Jem, “jail doesn’t have an outside light.”
“Looks like it’s over the door,” said Dill.
A long extension cord ran between the bars of a second-floor window and
down the side of the building. In the light from its bare bulb, Atticus was sitting
propped against the front door. He was sitting in one of his office chairs, and he
was reading, oblivious of the nightbugs dancing over his head.
I made to run, but Jem caught me. “Don’t go to him,” he said, “he might not
like it. He’s all right, let’s go home. I just wanted to see where he was.”
We were taking a short cut across the square when four dusty cars came in
from the Meridian highway, moving slowly in a line. They went around the
square, passed the bank building, and stopped in front of the jail.
Nobody got out. We saw Atticus look up from his newspaper. He closed it,
folded it deliberately, dropped it in his lap, and pushed his hat to the back of his
head. He seemed to be expecting them.
“Come on,” whispered Jem. We streaked across the square, across the street,
until we were in the shelter of the Jitney Jungle door. Jem peeked up the
sidewalk. “We can get closer,” he said. We ran to Tyndal’s Hardware door—
near enough, at the same time discreet.
In ones and twos, men got out of the cars. Shadows became substance as
lights revealed solid shapes moving toward the jail door. Atticus remained where
he was. The men hid him from view.
“He in there, Mr. Finch?” a man said.
“He is,” we heard Atticus answer, “and he’s asleep. Don’t wake him up.”
In obedience to my father, there followed what I later realized was a
sickeningly comic aspect of an unfunny situation: the men talked in near-
whispers.
“You know what we want,” another man said. “Get aside from the door, Mr.
Finch.”
“You can turn around and go home again, Walter,” Atticus said pleasantly.
“Heck Tate’s around somewhere.”
“The hell he is,” said another man. “Heck’s bunch’s so deep in the woods they
won’t get out till mornin‘.”
“Indeed? Why so?”
“Called ‘em off on a snipe hunt,” was the succinct answer. “Didn’t you think
a’that, Mr. Finch?”
“Thought about it, but didn’t believe it. Well then,” my father’s voice was still
the same, “that changes things, doesn’t it?”
“It do,” another deep voice said. Its owner was a shadow.
“Do you really think so?”
This was the second time I heard Atticus ask that question in two days, and it
meant somebody’s man would get jumped. This was too good to miss. I broke
away from Jem and ran as fast as I could to Atticus.
Jem shrieked and tried to catch me, but I had a lead on him and Dill. I pushed
my way through dark smelly bodies and burst into the circle of light.
“H-ey, Atticus!”
I thought he would have a fine surprise, but his face killed my joy. A flash of
plain fear was going out of his eyes, but returned when Dill and Jem wriggled
into the light.
There was a smell of stale whiskey and pigpen about, and when I glanced
around I discovered that these men were strangers. They were not the people I
saw last night. Hot embarrassment shot through me: I had leaped triumphantly
into a ring of people I had never seen before.
Atticus got up from his chair, but he was moving slowly, like an old man. He
put the newspaper down very carefully, adjusting its creases with lingering
fingers. They were trembling a little.
“Go home, Jem,” he said. “Take Scout and Dill home.”
We were accustomed to prompt, if not always cheerful acquiescence to
Atticus’s instructions, but from the way he stood Jem was not thinking of
budging.
“Go home, I said.”
Jem shook his head. As Atticus’s fists went to his hips, so did Jem’s, and as
they faced each other I could see little resemblance between them: Jem’s soft
brown hair and eyes, his oval face and snug-fitting ears were our mother’s,
contrasting oddly with Atticus’s graying black hair and square-cut features, but
they were somehow alike. Mutual defiance made them alike.
“Son, I said go home.”
Jem shook his head.
“I’ll send him home,” a burly man said, and grabbed Jem roughly by the
collar. He yanked Jem nearly off his feet.
“Don’t you touch him!” 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.
“That’ll do, Scout.” Atticus put his hand on my shoulder. “Don’t kick folks.
No—” he said, as I was pleading justification.
“Ain’t nobody gonna do Jem that way,” I said.
“All right, Mr. Finch, get ‘em outa here,” someone growled. “You got fifteen
seconds to get ’em outa here.”
In the midst of this strange assembly, Atticus stood trying to make Jem mind
him. “I ain’t going,” was his steady answer to Atticus’s threats, requests, and
finally, “Please Jem, take them home.”
I was getting a bit tired of that, but felt Jem had his own reasons for doing as
he did, in view of his prospects once Atticus did get him home. I looked around
the crowd. It was a summer’s night, but the men were dressed, most of them, in
overalls and denim shirts buttoned up to the collars. I thought they must be cold-
natured, as their sleeves were unrolled and buttoned at the cuffs. Some wore hats
pulled firmly down over their ears. They were sullen-looking, sleepy-eyed men
who seemed unused to late hours. I sought once more for a familiar face, and at
the center of the semi-circle I found one.
“Hey, Mr. Cunningham.”
The man did not hear me, it seemed.
“Hey, Mr. Cunningham. How’s your entailment gettin‘ along?”
Mr. Walter Cunningham’s legal affairs were well known to me; Atticus had
once described them at length. The big man blinked and hooked his thumbs in
his overall straps. He seemed uncomfortable; he cleared his throat and looked
away. My friendly overture had fallen flat.
Mr. Cunningham wore no hat, and the top half of his forehead was white in
contrast to his sunscorched face, which led me to believe that he wore one most
days. He shifted his feet, clad in heavy work shoes.
“Don’t you remember me, Mr. Cunningham? I’m Jean Louise Finch. You
brought us some hickory nuts one time, remember?” I began to sense the futility
one feels when unacknowledged by a chance acquaintance.
“I go to school with Walter,” I began again. “He’s your boy, ain’t he? Ain’t
he, sir?”
Mr. Cunningham was moved to a faint nod. He did know me, after all.
“He’s in my grade,” I said, “and he does right well. He’s a good boy,” I
added, “a real nice boy. We brought him home for dinner one time. Maybe he
told you about me, I beat him up one time but he was real nice about it. Tell him
hey for me, won’t you?”
Atticus had said it was the polite thing to talk to people about what they were
interested in, not about what you were interested in. Mr. Cunningham displayed
no interest in his son, so I tackled his entailment once more in a last-ditch effort
to make him feel at home.
“Entailments are bad,” I was advising him, when I slowly awoke to the fact
that I was addressing the entire aggregation. The men were all looking at me,
some had their mouths half-open. Atticus had stopped poking at Jem: they were
standing together beside Dill. Their attention amounted to fascination. Atticus’s
mouth, even, was half-open, an attitude he had once described as uncouth. Our
eyes met and he shut it.
“Well, Atticus, I was just sayin‘ to Mr. Cunningham that entailments are bad
an’ all that, but you said not to worry, it takes a long time sometimes . . . that you
all’d ride it out together . . .” I was slowly drying up, wondering what idiocy I
had committed. Entailments seemed all right enough for livingroom talk.
I began to feel sweat gathering at the edges of my hair; I could stand anything
but a bunch of people looking at me. They were quite still.
“What’s the matter?” I asked.
Atticus said nothing. I looked around and up at Mr. Cunningham, whose face
was equally impassive. Then he did a peculiar thing. He squatted down and took
me by both shoulders.
“I’ll tell him you said hey, little lady,” he said.
Then he straightened up and waved a big paw. “Let’s clear out,” he called.
“Let’s get going, boys.”
As they had come, in ones and twos the men shuffled back to their ramshackle
cars. Doors slammed, engines coughed, and they were gone.
I turned to Atticus, but Atticus had gone to the jail and was leaning against it
with his face to the wall. I went to him and pulled his sleeve. “Can we go home
now?” He nodded, produced his handkerchief, gave his face a going-over and
blew his nose violently.
“Mr. Finch?”
A soft husky voice came from the darkness above: “They gone?”
Atticus stepped back and looked up. “They’ve gone,” he said. “Get some
sleep, Tom. They won’t bother you any more.”
From a different direction, another voice cut crisply through the night:
“You’re damn tootin‘ they won’t. Had you covered all the time, Atticus.”
Mr. Underwood and a double-barreled shotgun were leaning out his window
above The Maycomb Tribune office.
It was long past my bedtime and I was growing quite tired; it seemed that
Atticus and Mr. Underwood would talk for the rest of the night, Mr. Underwood
out the window and Atticus up at him. Finally Atticus returned, switched off the
light above the jail door, and picked up his chair.
“Can I carry it for you, Mr. Finch?” asked Dill. He had not said a word the
whole time.
“Why, thank you, son.”
Walking toward the office, Dill and I fell into step behind Atticus and Jem.
Dill was encumbered by the chair, and his pace was slower. Atticus and Jem
were well ahead of us, and I assumed that Atticus was giving him hell for not
going home, but I was wrong. As they passed under a streetlight, Atticus reached
out and massaged Jem’s hair, his one gesture of affection.
16
J
em heard me. He thrust his head around the connecting door. As he came to
my bed Atticus’s light flashed on. We stayed where we were until it went off; we
heard him turn over, and we waited until he was still again.
Jem took me to his room and put me in bed beside him. “Try to go to sleep,”
he said, “It’ll be all over after tomorrow, maybe.”
We had come in quietly, so as not to wake Aunty. Atticus killed the engine in
the driveway and coasted to the carhouse; we went in the back door and to our
rooms without a word. I was very tired, and was drifting into sleep when the
memory of Atticus calmly folding his newspaper and pushing back his hat
became Atticus standing in the middle of an empty waiting street, pushing up his
glasses. The full meaning of the night’s events hit me and I began crying. Jem
was awfully nice about it: for once he didn’t remind me that people nearly nine
years old didn’t do things like that.
Everybody’s appetite was delicate this morning, except Jem’s: he ate his way
through three eggs. Atticus watched in frank admiration; Aunt Alexandra sipped
coffee and radiated waves of disapproval. Children who slipped out at night
were a disgrace to the family. Atticus said he was right glad his disgraces had
come along, but Aunty said, “Nonsense, Mr. Underwood was there all the time.”
“You know, it’s a funny thing about Braxton,” said Atticus. “He despises
Negroes, won’t have one near him.”
Local opinion held Mr. Underwood to be an intense, profane little man, whose
father in a fey fit of humor christened Braxton Bragg, a name Mr. Underwood
had done his best to live down. Atticus said naming people after Confederate
generals made slow steady drinkers.
Calpurnia was serving Aunt Alexandra more coffee, and she shook her head at
what I thought was a pleading winning look. “You’re still too little,” she said.
“I’ll tell you when you ain’t.” I said it might help my stomach. “All right,” she
said, and got a cup from the sideboard. She poured one tablespoonful of coffee
into it and filled the cup to the brim with milk. I thanked her by sticking out my
tongue at it, and looked up to catch Aunty’s warning frown. But she was
frowning at Atticus.
She waited until Calpurnia was in the kitchen, then she said, “Don’t talk like
that in front of them.”
“Talk like what in front of whom?” he asked.
“Like that in front of Calpurnia. You said Braxton Underwood despises
Negroes right in front of her.”
“Well, I’m sure Cal knows it. Everybody in Maycomb knows it.”
I was beginning to notice a subtle change in my father these days, that came
out when he talked with Aunt Alexandra. It was a quiet digging in, never
outright irritation. There was a faint starchiness in his voice when he said,
“Anything fit to say at the table’s fit to say in front of Calpurnia. She knows
what she means to this family.”
“I don’t think it’s a good habit, Atticus. It encourages them. You know how
they talk among themselves. Every thing that happens in this town’s out to the
Quarters before sundown.”
My father put down his knife. “I don’t know of any law that says they can’t
talk. Maybe if we didn’t give them so much to talk about they’d be quiet. Why
don’t you drink your coffee, Scout?”
I was playing in it with the spoon. “I thought Mr. Cunningham was a friend of
ours. You told me a long time ago he was.”
“He still is.”
“But last night he wanted to hurt you.”
Atticus placed his fork beside his knife and pushed his plate aside. “Mr.
Cunningham’s basically a good man,” he said, “he just has his blind spots along
with the rest of us.”
Jem spoke. “Don’t call that a blind spot. He’da killed you last night when he
first went there.”
“He might have hurt me a little,” Atticus conceded, “but son, you’ll
understand folks a little better when you’re older. A mob’s always made up of
people, no matter what. Mr. Cunningham was part of a mob last night, but he
was still a man. Every mob in every little Southern town is always made up of
people you know—doesn’t say much for them, does it?”
“I’ll say not,” said Jem.
“So it took an eight-year-old child to bring ‘em to their senses, didn’t it?” said
Atticus. “That proves something—that a gang of wild animals can be stopped,
simply because they’re still human. Hmp, maybe we need a police force of
children . . . you children last night made Walter Cunningham stand in my shoes
for a minute. That was enough.”
Well, I hoped Jem would understand folks a little better when he was older; I
wouldn’t. “First day Walter comes back to school’ll be his last,” I affirmed.
“You will not touch him,” Atticus said flatly. “I don’t want either of you
bearing a grudge about this thing, no matter what happens.”
“You see, don’t you,” said Aunt Alexandra, “what comes of things like this.
Don’t say I haven’t told you.”
Atticus said he’d never say that, pushed out his chair and got up. “There’s a
day ahead, so excuse me. Jem, I don’t want you and Scout downtown today,
please.”
As Atticus departed, Dill came bounding down the hall into the diningroom.
“It’s all over town this morning,” he announced, “all about how we held off a
hundred folks with our bare hands . . .” Aunt Alexandra stared him to silence. “It
was not a hundred folks,” she said, “and nobody held anybody off. It was just a
nest of those Cunninghams, drunk and disorderly.”
“Aw, Aunty, that’s just Dill’s way,” said Jem. He signaled us to follow him.
“You all stay in the yard today,” she said, as we made our way to the front
porch.
It was like Saturday. People from the south end of the county passed our
house in a leisurely but steady stream.
Mr. Dolphus Raymond lurched by on his thoroughbred. “Don’t see how he
stays in the saddle,” murmured Jem. “How c’n you stand to get drunk ‘fore eight
in the morning?”
A wagonload of ladies rattled past us. They wore cotton sunbonnets and
dresses with long sleeves. A bearded man in a wool hat drove them. “Yonder’s
some Mennonites,” Jem said to Dill. “They don’t have buttons.” They lived deep
in the woods, did most of their trading across the river, and rarely came to
Maycomb. Dill was interested. “They’ve all got blue eyes,” Jem explained, “and
the men can’t shave after they marry. Their wives like for ‘em to tickle ’em with
their beards.”
Mr. X Billups rode by on a mule and waved to us. “He’s a funny man,” said
Jem. “X’s his name, not his initial. He was in court one time and they asked him
his name. He said X Billups. Clerk asked him to spell it and he said X. Asked
him again and he said X. They kept at it till he wrote X on a sheet of paper and
held it up for everybody to see. They asked him where he got his name and he
said that’s the way his folks signed him up when he was born.”
As the county went by us, Jem gave Dill the histories and general attitudes of
the more prominent figures: Mr. Tensaw Jones voted the straight Prohibition
ticket; Miss Emily Davis dipped snuff in private; Mr. Byron Waller could play
the violin; Mr. Jake Slade was cutting his third set of teeth.
A wagonload of unusually stern-faced citizens appeared. When they pointed
to Miss Maudie Atkinson’s yard, ablaze with summer flowers, Miss Maudie
herself came out on the porch. There was an odd thing about Miss Maudie—on
her porch she was too far away for us to see her features clearly, but we could
always catch her mood by the way she stood. She was now standing arms
akimbo, her shoulders drooping a little, her head cocked to one side, her glasses
winking in the sunlight. We knew she wore a grin of the uttermost wickedness.
The driver of the wagon slowed down his mules, and a shrill-voiced woman
called out: “He that cometh in vanity departeth in darkness!”
Miss Maudie answered: “A merry heart maketh a cheerful countenance!”
I guess that the foot-washers thought that the Devil was quoting Scripture for
his own purposes, as the driver speeded his mules. Why they objected to Miss
Maudie’s yard was a mystery, heightened in my mind because for someone who
spent all the daylight hours outdoors, Miss Maudie’s command of Scripture was
formidable.
“You goin‘ to court this morning?” asked Jem. We had strolled over.
“I am not,” she said. “I have no business with the court this morning.”
“Aren’t you goin‘ down to watch?” asked Dill.
“I am not. ‘t’s morbid, watching a poor devil on trial for his life. Look at all
those folks, it’s like a Roman carnival.”
“They hafta try him in public, Miss Maudie,” I said. “Wouldn’t be right if
they didn’t.”
“I’m quite aware of that,” she said. “Just because it’s public, I don’t have to
go, do I?”
Miss Stephanie Crawford came by. She wore a hat and gloves. “Um, um, um,”
she said. “Look at all those folks—you’d think William Jennings Bryan was
speakin‘.”
“And where are you going, Stephanie?” inquired Miss Maudie.
“To the Jitney Jungle.”
Miss Maudie said she’d never seen Miss Stephanie go to the Jitney Jungle in a
hat in her life.
“Well,” said Miss Stephanie, “I thought I might just look in at the courthouse,
to see what Atticus’s up to.”
“Better be careful he doesn’t hand you a subpoena.”
We asked Miss Maudie to elucidate: she said Miss Stephanie seemed to know
so much about the case she might as well be called on to testify.
We held off until noon, when Atticus came home to dinner and said they’d
spent the morning picking the jury. After dinner, we stopped by for Dill and
went to town.
It was a gala occasion. There was no room at the public hitching rail for
another animal, mules and wagons were parked under every available tree. The
courthouse square was covered with picnic parties sitting on newspapers,
washing down biscuit and syrup with warm milk from fruit jars. Some people
were gnawing on cold chicken and cold fried pork chops. The more affluent
chased their food with drugstore Coca-Cola in bulb-shaped soda glasses. Greasy-
faced children popped-the-whip through the crowd, and babies lunched at their
mothers’ breasts.
In a far corner of the square, the Negroes sat quietly in the sun, dining on
sardines, crackers, and the more vivid flavors of Nehi Cola. Mr. Dolphus
Raymond sat with them.
“Jem,” said Dill, “he’s drinkin‘ out of a sack.”
Mr. Dolphus Raymond seemed to be so doing: two yellow drugstore straws
ran from his mouth to the depths of a brown paper bag.
“Ain’t ever seen anybody do that,” murmured Dill.
“How does he keep what’s in it in it?”
Jem giggled. “He’s got a Co-Cola bottle full of whiskey in there. That’s so’s
not to upset the ladies. You’ll see him sip it all afternoon, he’ll step out for a
while and fill it back up.”
“Why’s he sittin‘ with the colored folks?”
“Always does. He likes ‘em better’n he likes us, I reckon. Lives by himself
way down near the county line. He’s got a colored woman and all sorts of mixed
chillun. Show you some of ’em if we see ‘em.”
“He doesn’t look like trash,” said Dill.
“He’s not, he owns all one side of the riverbank down there, and he’s from a
real old family to boot.”
“Then why does he do like that?”
“That’s just his way,” said Jem. “They say he never got over his weddin‘. He
was supposed to marry one of the—the Spencer ladies, I think. They were gonna
have a huge weddin’, but they didn’t—after the rehearsal the bride went upstairs
and blew her head off. Shotgun. She pulled the trigger with her toes.”
“Did they ever know why?”
“No,” said Jem, “nobody ever knew quite why but Mr. Dolphus. They said it
was because she found out about his colored woman, he reckoned he could keep
her and get married too. He’s been sorta drunk ever since. You know, though,
he’s real good to those chillun—”
“Jem,” I asked, “what’s a mixed child?”
“Half white, half colored. You’ve seen ‘em, Scout. You know that red-kinky-
headed one that delivers for the drugstore. He’s half white. They’re real sad.”
“Sad, how come?”
“They don’t belong anywhere. Colored folks won’t have ‘em because they’re
half white; white folks won’t have ’em cause they’re colored, so they’re just in-
betweens, don’t belong anywhere. But Mr. Dolphus, now, they say he’s shipped
two of his up north. They don’t mind ‘em up north. Yonder’s one of ’em.”
A small boy clutching a Negro woman’s hand walked toward us. He looked
all Negro to me: he was rich chocolate with flaring nostrils and beautiful teeth.
Sometimes he would skip happily, and the Negro woman tugged his hand to
make him stop.
Jem waited until they passed us. “That’s one of the little ones,” he said.
“How can you tell?” asked Dill. “He looked black to me.”
“You can’t sometimes, not unless you know who they are. But he’s half
Raymond, all right.”
“But how can you tell?” I asked.
“I told you, Scout, you just hafta know who they are.”
“Well how do you know we ain’t Negroes?”
“Uncle Jack Finch says we really don’t know. He says as far as he can trace
back the Finches we ain’t, but for all he knows we mighta come straight out of
Ethiopia durin‘ the Old Testament.”
“Well if we came out durin‘ the Old Testament it’s too long ago to matter.”
“That’s what I thought,” said Jem, “but around here once you have a drop of
Negro blood, that makes you all black. Hey, look—”
Some invisible signal had made the lunchers on the square rise and scatter bits
of newspaper, cellophane, and wrapping paper. Children came to mothers,
babies were cradled on hips as men in sweat-stained hats collected their families
and herded them through the courthouse doors. In the far corner of the square the
Negroes and Mr. Dolphus Raymond stood up and dusted their breeches. There
were few women and children among them, which seemed to dispel the holiday
mood. They waited patiently at the doors behind the white families.
“Let’s go in,” said Dill.
“Naw, we better wait till they get in, Atticus might not like it if he sees us,”
said Jem.
The Maycomb County courthouse was faintly reminiscent of Arlington in one
respect: the concrete pillars supporting its south roof were too heavy for their
light burden. The pillars were all that remained standing when the original
courthouse burned in 1856. Another courthouse was built around them. It is
better to say, built in spite of them. But for the south porch, the Maycomb
County courthouse was early Victorian, presenting an unoffensive vista when
seen from the north. From the other side, however, Greek revival columns
clashed with a big nineteenth-century clock tower housing a rusty unreliable
instrument, a view indicating a people determined to preserve every physical
scrap of the past.
To reach the courtroom, on the second floor, one passed sundry sunless
county cubbyholes: the tax assessor, the tax collector, the county clerk, the
county solicitor, the circuit clerk, the judge of probate lived in cool dim hutches
that smelled of decaying record books mingled with old damp cement and stale
urine. It was necessary to turn on the lights in the daytime; there was always a
film of dust on the rough floorboards. The inhabitants of these offices were
creatures of their environment: little gray-faced men, they seemed untouched by
wind or sun.
We knew there was a crowd, but we had not bargained for the multitudes in
the first-floor hallway. I got separated from Jem and Dill, but made my way
toward the wall by the stairwell, knowing Jem would come for me eventually. I
found myself in the middle of the Idlers’ Club and made myself as unobtrusive
as possible. This was a group of white-shirted, khaki-trousered, suspendered old
men who had spent their lives doing nothing and passed their twilight days doing
same on pine benches under the live oaks on the square. Attentive critics of
courthouse business, Atticus said they knew as much law as the Chief Justice,
from long years of observation. Normally, they were the court’s only spectators,
and today they seemed resentful of the interruption of their comfortable routine.
When they spoke, their voices sounded casually important. The conversation
was about my father.
“. . . thinks he knows what he’s doing,” one said.
“Oh-h now, I wouldn’t say that,” said another. “Atticus Finch’s a deep reader,
a mighty deep reader.”
“He reads all right, that’s all he does.” The club snickered.
“Lemme tell you somethin‘ now, Billy,” a third said, “you know the court
appointed him to defend this nigger.”
“Yeah, but Atticus aims to defend him. That’s what I don’t like about it.”
This was news, news that put a different light on things: Atticus had to,
whether he wanted to or not. I thought it odd that he hadn’t said anything to us
about it—we could have used it many times in defending him and ourselves. He
had to, that’s why he was doing it, equaled fewer fights and less fussing. But did
that explain the town’s attitude? The court appointed Atticus to defend him.
Atticus aimed to defend him. That’s what they didn’t like about it. It was
confusing.
The Negroes, having waited for the white people to go upstairs, began to
come in. “Whoa now, just a minute,” said a club member, holding up his
walking stick. “Just don’t start up them there stairs yet awhile.”
The club began its stiff-jointed climb and ran into Dill and Jem on their way
down looking for me. They squeezed past and Jem called, “Scout, come on,
there ain’t a seat left. We’ll hafta stand up.”
“Looka there, now.” he said irritably, as the black people surged upstairs. The
old men ahead of them would take most of the standing room. We were out of
luck and it was my fault, Jem informed me. We stood miserably by the wall.
“Can’t you all get in?”
Reverend Sykes was looking down at us, black hat in hand.
“Hey, Reverend,” said Jem. “Naw, Scout here messed us up.”
“Well, let’s see what we can do.”
Reverend Sykes edged his way upstairs. In a few moments he was back.
“There’s not a seat downstairs. Do you all reckon it’ll be all right if you all came
to the balcony with me?”
“Gosh yes,” said Jem. Happily, we sped ahead of Reverend Sykes to the
courtroom floor. There, we went up a covered staircase and waited at the door.
Reverend Sykes came puffing behind us, and steered us gently through the black
people in the balcony. Four Negroes rose and gave us their front-row seats.
The Colored balcony ran along three walls of the courtroom like a second-
story veranda, and from it we could see everything.
The jury sat to the left, under long windows. Sunburned, lanky, they seemed
to be all farmers, but this was natural: townfolk rarely sat on juries, they were
either struck or excused. One or two of the jury looked vaguely like dressed-up
Cunninghams. At this stage they sat straight and alert.
The circuit solicitor and another man, Atticus and Tom Robinson sat at tables
with their backs to us. There was a brown book and some yellow tablets on the
solicitor’s table; Atticus’s was bare. Just inside the railing that divided the
spectators from the court, the witnesses sat on cowhide-bottomed chairs. Their
backs were to us.
Judge Taylor was on the bench, looking like a sleepy old shark, his pilot fish
writing rapidly below in front of him. Judge Taylor looked like most judges I
had ever seen: amiable, white-haired, slightly ruddy-faced, he was a man who
ran his court with an alarming informality—he sometimes propped his feet up,
he often cleaned his fingernails with his pocket knife. In long equity hearings,
especially after dinner, he gave the impression of dozing, an impression
dispelled forever when a lawyer once deliberately pushed a pile of books to the
floor in a desperate effort to wake him up. Without opening his eyes, Judge
Taylor murmured, “Mr. Whitley, do that again and it’ll cost you one hundred
dollars.”
He was a man learned in the law, and although he seemed to take his job
casually, in reality he kept a firm grip on any proceedings that came before him.
Only once was Judge Taylor ever seen at a dead standstill in open court, and the
Cunninghams stopped him. Old Sarum, their stamping grounds, was populated
by two families separate and apart in the beginning, but unfortunately bearing
the same name. The Cunninghams married the Coninghams until the spelling of
the names was academic—academic until a Cunningham disputed a Coningham
over land titles and took to the law. During a controversy of this character, Jeems
Cunningham testified that his mother spelled it Cunningham on deeds and
things, but she was really a Coningham, she was an uncertain speller, a seldom
reader, and was given to looking far away sometimes when she sat on the front
gallery in the evening. After nine hours of listening to the eccentricities of Old
Sarum’s inhabitants, Judge Taylor threw the case out of court. When asked upon
what grounds, Judge Taylor said, “Champertous connivance,” and declared he
hoped to God the litigants were satisfied by each having had their public say.
They were. That was all they had wanted in the first place.
Judge Taylor had one interesting habit. He permitted smoking in his
courtroom but did not himself indulge: sometimes, if one was lucky, one had the
privilege of watching him put a long dry cigar into his mouth and munch it
slowly up. Bit by bit the dead cigar would disappear, to reappear some hours
later as a flat slick mess, its essence extracted and mingling with Judge Taylor’s
digestive juices. I once asked Atticus how Mrs. Taylor stood to kiss him, but
Atticus said they didn’t kiss much.
The witness stand was to the right of Judge Taylor, and when we got to our
seats Mr. Heck Tate was already on it.
17
“J
em,” I said, “are those the Ewells sittin‘ down yonder?”
“Hush,” said Jem, “Mr. Heck Tate’s testifyin‘.”
Mr. Tate had dressed for the occasion. He wore an ordinary business suit,
which made him look somehow like every other man: gone were his high boots,
lumber jacket, and bullet-studded belt. From that moment he ceased to terrify
me. He was sitting forward in the witness chair, his hands clasped between his
knees, listening attentively to the circuit solicitor.
The solicitor, a Mr. Gilmer, was not well known to us. He was from
Abbottsville; we saw him only when court convened, and that rarely, for court
was of no special interest to Jem and me. A balding, smooth-faced man, he could
have been anywhere between forty and sixty. Although his back was to us, we
knew he had a slight cast in one of his eyes which he used to his advantage: he
seemed to be looking at a person when he was actually doing nothing of the
kind, thus he was hell on juries and witnesses. The jury, thinking themselves
under close scrutiny, paid attention; so did the witnesses, thinking likewise.
“. . . in your own words, Mr. Tate,” Mr. Gilmer was saying.
“Well,” said Mr. Tate, touching his glasses and speaking to his knees, “I was
called—”
“Could you say it to the jury, Mr. Tate? Thank you. Who called you?”
Mr. Tate said, “I was fetched by Bob—by Mr. Bob Ewell yonder, one night
—”
“What night, sir?”
Mr. Tate said, “It was the night of November twenty-first. I was just leaving
my office to go home when B—Mr. Ewell came in, very excited he was, and
said get out to his house quick, some nigger’d raped his girl.”
“Did you go?”
“Certainly. Got in the car and went out as fast as I could.”
“And what did you find?”
“Found her lying on the floor in the middle of the front room, one on the right
as you go in. She was pretty well beat up, but I heaved her to her feet and she
washed her face in a bucket in the corner and said she was all right. I asked her
who hurt her and she said it was Tom Robinson—”
Judge Taylor, who had been concentrating on his fingernails, looked up as if
he were expecting an objection, but Atticus was quiet.
“—asked her if he beat her like that, she said yes he had. Asked her if he took
advantage of her and she said yes he did. So I went down to Robinson’s house
and brought him back. She identified him as the one, so I took him in. That’s all
there was to it.”
“Thank you,” said Mr. Gilmer.
Judge Taylor said, “Any questions, Atticus?”
“Yes,” said my father. He was sitting behind his table; his chair was skewed to
one side, his legs were crossed and one arm was resting on the back of his chair.
“Did you call a doctor, Sheriff? Did anybody call a doctor?” asked Atticus.
“No sir,” said Mr. Tate.
“Didn’t call a doctor?”
“No sir,” repeated Mr. Tate.
“Why not?” There was an edge to Atticus’s voice.
“Well I can tell you why I didn’t. It wasn’t necessary, Mr. Finch. She was
mighty banged up. Something sho‘ happened, it was obvious.”
“But you didn’t call a doctor? While you were there did anyone send for one,
fetch one, carry her to one?”
“No sir—”
Judge Taylor broke in. “He’s answered the question three times, Atticus. He
didn’t call a doctor.”
Atticus said, “I just wanted to make sure, Judge,” and the judge smiled.
Jem’s hand, which was resting on the balcony rail, tightened around it. He
drew in his breath suddenly. Glancing below, I saw no corresponding reaction,
and wondered if Jem was trying to be dramatic. Dill was watching peacefully,
and so was Reverend Sykes beside him.
“What is it?” I whispered, and got a terse, “Sh-h!”
“Sheriff,” Atticus was saying, “you say she was mighty banged up. In what
way?”
“Well—”
“Just describe her injuries, Heck.”
“Well, she was beaten around the head. There was already bruises comin‘ on
her arms, and it happened about thirty minutes before—”
“How do you know?”
Mr. Tate grinned. “Sorry, that’s what they said. Anyway, she was pretty
bruised up when I got there, and she had a black eye comin‘.”
“Which eye?”
Mr. Tate blinked and ran his hands through his hair. “Let’s see,” he said
softly, then he looked at Atticus as if he considered the question childish. “Can’t
you remember?” Atticus asked.
Mr. Tate pointed to an invisible person five inches in front of him and said,
“Her left.”
“Wait a minute, Sheriff,” said Atticus. “Was it her left facing you or her left
looking the same way you were?”
Mr. Tate said, “Oh yes, that’d make it her right. It was her right eye, Mr.
Finch. I remember now, she was bunged up on that side of her face . . .”
Mr. Tate blinked again, as if something had suddenly been made plain to him.
Then he turned his head and looked around at Tom Robinson. As if by instinct,
Tom Robinson raised his head.
Something had been made plain to Atticus also, and it brought him to his feet.
“Sheriff, please repeat what you said.”
“It was her right eye, I said.”
“No . . .” Atticus walked to the court reporter’s desk and bent down to the
furiously scribbling hand. It stopped, flipped back the shorthand pad, and the
court reporter said, “‘Mr. Finch. I remember now she was bunged up on that side
of the face.’”
Atticus looked up at Mr. Tate. “Which side again, Heck?”
“The right side, Mr. Finch, but she had more bruises—you wanta hear about
‘em?”
Atticus seemed to be bordering on another question, but he thought better of it
and said, “Yes, what were her other injuries?” As Mr. Tate answered, Atticus
turned and looked at Tom Robinson as if to say this was something they hadn’t
bargained for.
“. . . her arms were bruised, and she showed me her neck. There were definite
finger marks on her gullet—”
“All around her throat? At the back of her neck?”
“I’d say they were all around, Mr. Finch.”
“You would?”
“Yes sir, she had a small throat, anybody could’a reached around it with—”
“Just answer the question yes or no, please, Sheriff,” said Atticus dryly, and
Mr. Tate fell silent.
Atticus sat down and nodded to the circuit solicitor, who shook his head at the
judge, who nodded to Mr. Tate, who rose stiffly and stepped down from the
witness stand.
Below us, heads turned, feet scraped the floor, babies were shifted to
shoulders, and a few children scampered out of the courtroom. The Negroes
behind us whispered softly among themselves; Dill was asking Reverend Sykes
what it was all about, but Reverend Sykes said he didn’t know. So far, things
were utterly dull: nobody had thundered, there were no arguments between
opposing counsel, there was no drama; a grave disappointment to all present, it
seemed. Atticus was proceeding amiably, as if he were involved in a title
dispute. With his infinite capacity for calming turbulent seas, he could make a
rape case as dry as a sermon. Gone was the terror in my mind of stale whiskey
and barnyard smells, of sleepy-eyed sullen men, of a husky voice calling in the
night, “Mr. Finch? They gone?” Our nightmare had gone with daylight,
everything would come out all right.
All the spectators were as relaxed as Judge Taylor, except Jem. His mouth
was twisted into a purposeful half-grin, and his eyes happy about, and he said
something about corroborating evidence, which made me sure he was showing
off.
“. . . Robert E. Lee Ewell!”
In answer to the clerk’s booming voice, a little bantam cock of a man rose and
strutted to the stand, the back of his neck reddening at the sound of his name.
When he turned around to take the oath, we saw that his face was as red as his
neck. We also saw no resemblance to his namesake. A shock of wispy new-
washed hair stood up from his forehead; his nose was thin, pointed, and shiny;
he had no chin to speak of—it seemed to be part of his crepey neck.
“—so help me God,” he crowed.
Every town the size of Maycomb had families like the Ewells. No economic
fluctuations changed their status—people like the Ewells lived as guests of the
county in prosperity as well as in the depths of a depression. No truant officers
could keep their numerous offspring in school; no public health officer could
free them from congenital defects, various worms, and the diseases indigenous
to filthy surroundings.
Maycomb’s Ewells lived behind the town garbage dump in what was once a
Negro cabin. The cabin’s plank walls were supplemented with sheets of
corrugated iron, its roof shingled with tin cans hammered flat, so only its general
shape suggested its original design: square, with four tiny rooms opening onto a
shotgun hall, the cabin rested uneasily upon four irregular lumps of limestone.
Its windows were merely open spaces in the walls, which in the summertime
were covered with greasy strips of cheesecloth to keep out the varmints that
feasted on Maycomb’s refuse.
The varmints had a lean time of it, for the Ewells gave the dump a thorough
gleaning every day, and the fruits of their industry (those that were not eaten)
made the plot of ground around the cabin look like the playhouse of an insane
child: what passed for a fence was bits of tree-limbs, broomsticks and tool
shafts, all tipped with rusty hammer-heads, snaggle-toothed rake heads, shovels,
axes and grubbing hoes, held on with pieces of barbed wire. Enclosed by this
barricade was a dirty yard containing the remains of a Model-T Ford (on blocks),
a discarded dentist’s chair, an ancient icebox, plus lesser items: old shoes, worn-
out table radios, picture frames, and fruit jars, under which scrawny orange
chickens pecked hopefully.
One corner of the yard, though, bewildered Maycomb. Against the fence, in a
line, were six chipped-enamel slop jars holding brilliant red geraniums, cared for
as tenderly as if they belonged to Miss Maudie Atkinson, had Miss Maudie
deigned to permit a geranium on her premises. People said they were Mayella
Ewell’s.
Nobody was quite sure how many children were on the place. Some people
said six, others said nine; there were always several dirty-faced ones at the
windows when anyone passed by. Nobody had occasion to pass by except at
Christmas, when the churches delivered baskets, and when the mayor of
Maycomb asked us to please help the garbage collector by dumping our own
trees and trash.
Atticus took us with him last Christmas when he complied with the mayor’s
request. A dirt road ran from the highway past the dump, down to a small Negro
settlement some five hundred yards beyond the Ewells‘. It was necessary either
to back out to the highway or go the full length of the road and turn around; most
people turned around in the Negroes’ front yards. In the frosty December dusk,
their cabins looked neat and snug with pale blue smoke rising from the chimneys
and doorways glowing amber from the fires inside. There were delicious smells
about: chicken, bacon frying crisp as the twilight air. Jem and I detected squirrel
cooking, but it took an old countryman like Atticus to identify possum and
rabbit, aromas that vanished when we rode back past the Ewell residence.
All the little man on the witness stand had that made him any better than his
nearest neighbors was, that if scrubbed with lye soap in very hot water, his skin
was white.
“Mr. Robert Ewell?” asked Mr. Gilmer.
“That’s m’name, cap’n,” said the witness.
Mr. Gilmer’s back stiffened a little, and I felt sorry for him. Perhaps I’d better
explain something now. I’ve heard that lawyers’ children, on seeing their parents
in court in the heat of argument, get the wrong idea: they think opposing counsel
to be the personal enemies of their parents, they suffer agonies, and are surprised
to see them often go out arm-in-arm with their tormenters during the first recess.
This was not true of Jem and me. We acquired no traumas from watching our
father win or lose. I’m sorry that I can’t provide any drama in this respect; if I
did, it would not be true. We could tell, however, when debate became more
acrimonious than professional, but this was from watching lawyers other than
our father. I never heard Atticus raise his voice in my life, except to a deaf
witness. Mr. Gilmer was doing his job, as Atticus was doing his. Besides, Mr.
Ewell was Mr. Gilmer’s witness, and he had no business being rude to him of all
people.
“Are you the father of Mayella Ewell?” was the next question.
“Well, if I ain’t I can’t do nothing about it now, her ma’s dead,” was the
answer.
Judge Taylor stirred. He turned slowly in his swivel chair and looked benignly
at the witness. “Are you the father of Mayella Ewell?” he asked, in a way that
made the laughter below us stop suddenly.
“Yes sir,” Mr. Ewell said meekly.
Judge Taylor went on in tones of good will: “This the first time you’ve ever
been in court? I don’t recall ever seeing you here.” At the witness’s affirmative
nod he continued, “Well, let’s get something straight. There will be no more
audibly obscene speculations on any subject from anybody in this courtroom as
long as I’m sitting here. Do you understand?”
Mr. Ewell nodded, but I don’t think he did. Judge Taylor sighed and said, “All
right, Mr. Gilmer?”
“Thank you, sir. Mr. Ewell, would you tell us in your own words what
happened on the evening of November twenty-first, please?”
Jem grinned and pushed his hair back. Just-in-your-own words was Mr.
Gilmer’s trademark. We often wondered who else’s words Mr. Gilmer was
afraid his witness might employ.
“Well, the night of November twenty-one I was comin‘ in from the woods
with a load o’kindlin’ and just as I got to the fence I heard Mayella screamin‘
like a stuck hog inside the house—”
Here Judge Taylor glanced sharply at the witness and must have decided his
speculations devoid of evil intent, for he subsided sleepily.
“What time was it, Mr. Ewell?”
“Just ‘fore sundown. Well, I was sayin’ Mayella was screamin‘ fit to beat
Jesus—” another glance from the bench silenced Mr. Ewell.
“Yes? She was screaming?” said Mr. Gilmer.
Mr. Ewell looked confusedly at the judge. “Well, Mayella was raisin‘ this
holy racket so I dropped m’load and run as fast as I could but I run into th’
fence, but when I got distangled I run up to th‘ window and I seen—” Mr.
Ewell’s face grew scarlet. He stood up and pointed his finger at Tom Robinson.
“—I seen that black nigger yonder ruttin’ on my Mayella!”
So serene was Judge Taylor’s court, that he had few occasions to use his
gavel, but he hammered fully five minutes. Atticus was on his feet at the bench
saying something to him, Mr. Heck Tate as first officer of the county stood in
the middle aisle quelling the packed courtroom. Behind us, there was an angry
muffled groan from the colored people.
Reverend Sykes leaned across Dill and me, pulling at Jem’s elbow. “Mr.
Jem,” he said, “you better take Miss Jean Louise home. Mr. Jem, you hear me?”
Jem turned his head. “Scout, go home. Dill, you’n‘Scout go home.”
“You gotta make me first,” I said, remembering Atticus’s blessed dictum.
Jem scowled furiously at me, then said to Reverend Sykes, “I think it’s okay,
Reverend, she doesn’t understand it.”
I was mortally offended. “I most certainly do, I c’n understand anything you
can.”
“Aw hush. She doesn’t understand it, Reverend, she ain’t nine yet.”
Reverend Sykes’s black eyes were anxious. “Mr. Finch know you all are here?
This ain’t fit for Miss Jean Louise or you boys either.”
Jem shook his head. “He can’t see us this far away. It’s all right, Reverend.”
I knew Jem would win, because I knew nothing could make him leave now.
Dill and I were safe, for a while: Atticus could see us from where he was, if he
looked.
As Judge Taylor banged his gavel, Mr. Ewell was sitting smugly in the
witness chair, surveying his handiwork. With one phrase he had turned happy
picknickers into a sulky, tense, murmuring crowd, being slowly hypnotized by
gavel taps lessening in intensity until the only sound in the courtroom was a dim
pink-pink-pink: the judge might have been rapping the bench with a pencil.
In possession of his court once more, Judge Taylor leaned back in his chair.
He looked suddenly weary; his age was showing, and I thought about what
Atticus had said—he and Mrs. Taylor didn’t kiss much—he must have been
nearly seventy.
“There has been a request,” Judge Taylor said, “that this courtroom be cleared
of spectators, or at least of women and children, a request that will be denied for
the time being. People generally see what they look for, and hear what they
listen for, and they have the right to subject their children to it, but I can assure
you of one thing: you will receive what you see and hear in silence or you will
leave this courtroom, but you won’t leave it until the whole boiling of you come
before me on contempt charges. Mr. Ewell, you will keep your testimony within
the confines of Christian English usage, if that is possible. Proceed, Mr. Gilmer.”
Mr. Ewell reminded me of a deaf-mute. I was sure he had never heard the
words Judge Taylor directed at him—his mouth struggled silently with them—
but their import registered on his face. Smugness faded from it, replaced by a
dogged earnestness that fooled Judge Taylor not at all: as long as Mr. Ewell was
on the stand, the judge kept his eyes on him, as if daring him to make a false
move.
Mr. Gilmer and Atticus exchanged glances. Atticus was sitting down again,
his fist rested on his cheek and we could not see his face. Mr. Gilmer looked
rather desperate. A question from Judge Taylor made him relax: “Mr. Ewell, did
you see the defendant having sexual intercourse with your daughter?”
“Yes, I did.”
The spectators were quiet, but the defendant said something. Atticus
whispered to him, and Tom Robinson was silent.
“You say you were at the window?” asked Mr. Gilmer.
“Yes sir.”
“How far is it from the ground?”
“‘bout three foot.”
“Did you have a clear view of the room?”
“Yes sir.”
“How did the room look?”
“Well, it was all slung about, like there was a fight.”
“What did you do when you saw the defendant?”
“Well, I run around the house to get in, but he run out the front door just
ahead of me. I sawed who he was, all right. I was too distracted about Mayella to
run after’im. I run in the house and she was lyin‘ on the floor squallin’—”
“Then what did you do?”
“Why, I run for Tate quick as I could. I knowed who it was, all right, lived
down yonder in that nigger-nest, passed the house every day. Jedge, I’ve asked
this county for fifteen years to clean out that nest down yonder, they’re
dangerous to live around ‘sides devaluin’ my property—”
“Thank you, Mr. Ewell,” said Mr. Gilmer hurriedly.
The witness made a hasty descent from the stand and ran smack into Atticus,
who had risen to question him. Judge Taylor permitted the court to laugh.
“Just a minute, sir,” said Atticus genially. “Could I ask you a question or
two?”
Mr. Ewell backed up into the witness chair, settled himself, and regarded
Atticus with haughty suspicion, an expression common to Maycomb County
witnesses when confronted by opposing counsel.
“Mr. Ewell,” Atticus began, “folks were doing a lot of running that night.
Let’s see, you say you ran to the house, you ran to the window, you ran inside,
you ran to Mayella, you ran for Mr. Tate. Did you, during all this running, run
for a doctor?”
“Wadn’t no need to. I seen what happened.”
“But there’s one thing I don’t understand,” said Atticus. “Weren’t you
concerned with Mayella’s condition?”
“I most positively was,” said Mr. Ewell. “I seen who done it.”
“No, I mean her physical condition. Did you not think the nature of her
injuries warranted immediate medical attention?”
“What?”
“Didn’t you think she should have had a doctor, immediately?”
The witness said he never thought of it, he had never called a doctor to any of
his’n in his life, and if he had it would have cost him five dollars. “That all?” he
asked.
“Not quite,” said Atticus casually. “Mr. Ewell, you heard the sheriff’s
testimony, didn’t you?”
“How’s that?”
“You were in the courtroom when Mr. Heck Tate was on the stand, weren’t
you? You heard everything he said, didn’t you?”
Mr. Ewell considered the matter carefully, and seemed to decide that the
question was safe.
“Yes,” he said.
“Do you agree with his description of Mayella’s injuries?”
“How’s that?”
Atticus looked around at Mr. Gilmer and smiled. Mr. Ewell seemed
determined not to give the defense the time of day.
“Mr. Tate testified that her right eye was blackened, that she was beaten
around the—”
“Oh yeah,” said the witness. “I hold with everything Tate said.”
“You do?” asked Atticus mildly. “I just want to make sure.” He went to the
court reporter, said something, and the reporter entertained us for some minutes
by reading Mr. Tate’s testimony as if it were stock-market quotations: “. . .
which eye her left oh yes that’d make it her right it was her right eye Mr. Finch I
remember now she was bunged.” He flipped the page. “Up on that side of the
face Sheriff please repeat what you said it was her right eye I said—”
“Thank you, Bert,” said Atticus. “You heard it again, Mr. Ewell. Do you have
anything to add to it? Do you agree with the sheriff?”
“I holds with Tate. Her eye was blacked and she was mighty beat up.”
The little man seemed to have forgotten his previous humiliation from the
bench. It was becoming evident that he thought Atticus an easy match. He
seemed to grow ruddy again; his chest swelled, and once more he was a red little
rooster. I thought he’d burst his shirt at Atticus’s next question:
“Mr. Ewell, can you read and write?”
Mr. Gilmer interrupted. “Objection,” he said. “Can’t see what witness’s
literacy has to do with the case, irrelevant’n‘immaterial.”
Judge Taylor was about to speak but Atticus said, “Judge, if you’ll allow the
question plus another one you’ll soon see.”
“All right, let’s see,” said Judge Taylor, “but make sure we see, Atticus.
Overruled.”
Mr. Gilmer seemed as curious as the rest of us as to what bearing the state of
Mr. Ewell’s education had on the case.
“I’ll repeat the question,” said Atticus. “Can you read and write?”
“I most positively can.”
“Will you write your name and show us?”
“I most positively will. How do you think I sign my relief checks?”
Mr. Ewell was endearing himself to his fellow citizens. The whispers and
chuckles below us probably had to do with what a card he was.
I was becoming nervous. Atticus seemed to know what he was doing—but it
seemed to me that he’d gone frog-sticking without a light. Never, never, never,
on cross-examination ask a witness a question you don’t already know the
answer to, was a tenet I absorbed with my baby-food. Do it, and you’ll often get
an answer you don’t want, an answer that might wreck your case.
Atticus was reaching into the inside pocket of his coat. He drew out an
envelope, then reached into his vest pocket and unclipped his fountain pen. He
moved leisurely, and had turned so that he was in full view of the jury. He
unscrewed the fountain-pen cap and placed it gently on his table. He shook the
pen a little, then handed it with the envelope to the witness. “Would you write
your name for us?” he asked. “Clearly now, so the jury can see you do it.”
Mr. Ewell wrote on the back of the envelope and looked up complacently to
see Judge Taylor staring at him as if he were some fragrant gardenia in full
bloom on the witness stand, to see Mr. Gilmer half-sitting, half-standing at his
table. The jury was watching him, one man was leaning forward with his hands
over the railing.
“What’s so interestin‘?” he asked.
“You’re left-handed, Mr. Ewell,” said Judge Taylor. Mr. Ewell turned angrily
to the judge and said he didn’t see what his being left-handed had to do with it,
that he was a Christ-fearing man and Atticus Finch was taking advantage of him.
Tricking lawyers like Atticus Finch took advantage of him all the time with their
tricking ways. He had told them what happened, he’d say it again and again—
which he did. Nothing Atticus asked him after that shook his story, that he’d
looked through the window, then ran the nigger off, then ran for the sheriff.
Atticus finally dismissed him.
Mr. Gilmer asked him one more question. “About your writing with your left
hand, are you ambidextrous, Mr. Ewell?”
“I most positively am not, I can use one hand good as the other. One hand
good as the other,” he added, glaring at the defense table.
Jem seemed to be having a quiet fit. He was pounding the balcony rail softly,
and once he whispered, “We’ve got him.”
I didn’t think so: Atticus was trying to show, it seemed to me, that Mr. Ewell
could have beaten up Mayella. That much I could follow. If her right eye was
blacked and she was beaten mostly on the right side of the face, it would tend to
show that a left-handed person did it. Sherlock Holmes and Jem Finch would
agree. But Tom Robinson could easily be left-handed, too. Like Mr. Heck Tate, I
imagined a person facing me, went through a swift mental pantomime, and
concluded that he might have held her with his right hand and pounded her with
his left. I looked down at him. His back was to us, but I could see his broad
shoulders and bull-thick neck. He could easily have done it. I thought Jem was
counting his chickens.
18
B
ut someone was booming again.
“Mayella Violet Ewell—!”
A young girl walked to the witness stand. As she raised her hand and swore
that the evidence she gave would be the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but
the truth so help her God, she seemed somehow fragile-looking, but when she
sat facing us in the witness chair she became what she was, a thick-bodied girl
accustomed to strenuous labor.
In Maycomb County, it was easy to tell when someone bathed regularly, as
opposed to yearly lavations: Mr. Ewell had a scalded look; as if an overnight
soaking had deprived him of protective layers of dirt, his skin appeared to be
sensitive to the elements. Mayella looked as if she tried to keep clean, and I was
reminded of the row of red geraniums in the Ewell yard.
Mr. Gilmer asked Mayella to tell the jury in her own words what happened on
the evening of November twenty-first of last year, just in her own words, please.
Mayella sat silently.
“Where were you at dusk on that evening?” began Mr. Gilmer patiently.
“On the porch.”
“Which porch?”
“Ain’t but one, the front porch.”
“What were you doing on the porch?”
“Nothin‘.”
Judge Taylor said, “Just tell us what happened. You can do that, can’t you?”
Mayella stared at him and burst into tears. She covered her mouth with her
hands and sobbed. Judge Taylor let her cry for a while, then he said, “That’s
enough now. Don’t be ‘fraid of anybody here, as long as you tell the truth. All
this is strange to you, I know, but you’ve nothing to be ashamed of and nothing
to fear. What are you scared of?”
Mayella said something behind her hands. “What was that?” asked the judge.
“Him,” she sobbed, pointing at Atticus.
“Mr. Finch?”
She nodded vigorously, saying, “Don’t want him doin‘ me like he done Papa,
tryin’ to make him out lefthanded . . .”
Judge Taylor scratched his thick white hair. It was plain that he had never
been confronted with a problem of this kind. “How old are you?” he asked.
“Nineteen-and-a-half,” Mayella said.
Judge Taylor cleared his throat and tried unsuccessfully to speak in soothing
tones. “Mr. Finch has no idea of scaring you,” he growled, “and if he did, I’m
here to stop him. That’s one thing I’m sitting up here for. Now you’re a big girl,
so you just sit up straight and tell the—tell us what happened to you. You can do
that, can’t you?”
I whispered to Jem, “Has she got good sense?”
Jem was squinting down at the witness stand. “Can’t tell yet,” he said. “She’s
got enough sense to get the judge sorry for her, but she might be just—oh, I
don’t know.”
Mollified, Mayella gave Atticus a final terrified glance and said to Mr.
Gilmer, “Well sir, I was on the porch and—and he came along and, you see,
there was this old chiffarobe in the yard Papa’d brought in to chop up for
kindlin‘—Papa told me to do it while he was off in the woods but I wadn’t
feelin’ strong enough then, so he came by—”
“Who is ‘he’?”
Mayella pointed to Tom Robinson. “I’ll have to ask you to be more specific,
please,” said Mr. Gilmer. “The reporter can’t put down gestures very well.”
“That’n yonder,” she said. “Robinson.”
“Then what happened?”
“I said come here, nigger, and bust up this chiffarobe for me, I gotta nickel for
you. He coulda done it easy enough, he could. So he come in the yard an‘ I went
in the house to get him the nickel and I turned around an ’fore I knew it he was
on me. Just run up behind me, he did. He got me round the neck, cussin‘ me an’
sayin‘ dirt—I fought’n’hollered, but he had me round the neck. He hit me agin
an‘ agin—”
Mr. Gilmer waited for Mayella to collect herself: she had twisted her
handkerchief into a sweaty rope; when she opened it to wipe her face it was a
mass of creases from her hot hands. She waited for Mr. Gilmer to ask another
question, but when he didn’t, she said, “-he chunked me on the floor an‘ choked
me’n took advantage of me.”
“Did you scream?” asked Mr. Gilmer. “Did you scream and fight back?”
“Reckon I did, hollered for all I was worth, kicked and hollered loud as I
could.”
“Then what happened?”
“I don’t remember too good, but next thing I knew Papa was in the room
a’standing over me hollerin‘ who done it, who done it? Then I sorta fainted an’
the next thing I knew Mr. Tate was pullin‘ me up offa the floor and leadin’ me to
the water bucket.”
Apparently Mayella’s recital had given her confidence, but it was not her
father’s brash kind: there was something stealthy about hers, like a steady-eyed
cat with a twitchy tail.
“You say you fought him off as hard as you could? Fought him tooth and
nail?” asked Mr. Gilmer.
“I positively did,” Mayella echoed her father.
“You are positive that he took full advantage of you?”
Mayella’s face contorted, and I was afraid that she would cry again. Instead,
she said, “He done what he was after.”
Mr. Gilmer called attention to the hot day by wiping his head with his hand.
“That’s all for the time being,” he said pleasantly, “but you stay there. I expect
big bad Mr. Finch has some questions to ask you.”
“State will not prejudice the witness against counsel for the defense,”
murmured Judge Taylor primly, “at least not at this time.”
Atticus got up grinning but instead of walking to the witness stand, he opened
his coat and hooked his thumbs in his vest, then he walked slowly across the
room to the windows. He looked out, but didn’t seem especially interested in
what he saw, then he turned and strolled back to the witness stand. From long
years of experience, I could tell he was trying to come to a decision about
something.
“Miss Mayella,” he said, smiling, “I won’t try to scare you for a while, not
yet. Let’s just get acquainted. How old are you?”
“Said I was nineteen, said it to the judge yonder.” Mayella jerked her head
resentfully at the bench.
“So you did, so you did, ma’am. You’ll have to bear with me, Miss Mayella,
I’m getting along and can’t remember as well as I used to. I might ask you things
you’ve already said before, but you’ll give me an answer, won’t you? Good.”
I could see nothing in Mayella’s expression to justify Atticus’s assumption
that he had secured her wholehearted cooperation. She was looking at him
furiously.
“Won’t answer a word you say long as you keep on mockin‘ me,” she said.
“Ma’am?” asked Atticus, startled.
“Long’s you keep on makin‘ fun o’me.”
Judge Taylor said, “Mr. Finch is not making fun of you. What’s the matter
with you?”
Mayella looked from under lowered eyelids at Atticus, but she said to the
judge: “Long’s he keeps on callin‘ me ma’am an sayin’ Miss Mayella. I don’t
hafta take his sass, I ain’t called upon to take it.”
Atticus resumed his stroll to the windows and let Judge Taylor handle this
one. Judge Taylor was not the kind of figure that ever evoked pity, but I did feel
a pang for him as he tried to explain. “That’s just Mr. Finch’s way,” he told
Mayella. “We’ve done business in this court for years and years, and Mr. Finch
is always courteous to everybody. He’s not trying to mock you, he’s trying to be
polite. That’s just his way.”
The judge leaned back. “Atticus, let’s get on with these proceedings, and let
the record show that the witness has not been sassed, her views to the contrary.”
I wondered if anybody had ever called her “ma’am,” or “Miss Mayella” in her
life; probably not, as she took offense to routine courtesy. What on earth was her
life like? I soon found out.
“You say you’re nineteen,” Atticus resumed. “How many sisters and brothers
have you?” He walked from the windows back to the stand.
“Seb’m,” she said, and I wondered if they were all like the specimen I had
seen the first day I started to school.
“You the eldest? The oldest?”
“Yes.”
“How long has your mother been dead?”
“Don’t know—long time.”
“Did you ever go to school?”
“Read’n‘write good as Papa yonder.”
Mayella sounded like a Mr. Jingle in a book I had been reading.
“How long did you go to school?”
“Two year—three year—dunno.”
Slowly but surely I began to see the pattern of Atticus’s questions: from
questions that Mr. Gilmer did not deem sufficiently irrelevant or immaterial to
object to, Atticus was quietly building up before the jury a picture of the Ewells’
home life. The jury learned the following things: their relief check was far from
enough to feed the family, and there was strong suspicion that Papa drank it up
anyway—he sometimes went off in the swamp for days and came home sick; the
weather was seldom cold enough to require shoes, but when it was, you could
make dandy ones from strips of old tires; the family hauled its water in buckets
from a spring that ran out at one end of the dump—they kept the surrounding
area clear of trash—and it was everybody for himself as far as keeping clean
went: if you wanted to wash you hauled your own water; the younger children
had perpetual colds and suffered from chronic ground-itch; there was a lady who
came around sometimes and asked Mayella why she didn’t stay in school—she
wrote down the answer; with two members of the family reading and writing,
there was no need for the rest of them to learn—Papa needed them at home.
“Miss Mayella,” said Atticus, in spite of himself, “a nineteen-year-old girl like
you must have friends. Who are your friends?”
The witness frowned as if puzzled. “Friends?”
“Yes, don’t you know anyone near your age, or older, or younger? Boys and
girls? Just ordinary friends?”
Mayella’s hostility, which had subsided to grudging neutrality, flared again.
“You makin‘ fun o’me agin, Mr. Finch?”
Atticus let her question answer his
“Do you love your father, Miss Mayella?” was his next.
“Love him, whatcha mean?”
“I mean, is he good to you, is he easy to get along with?”
“He does tollable, ‘cept when—”
“Except when?”
Mayella looked at her father, who was sitting with his chair tipped against the
railing. He sat up straight and waited for her to answer.
“Except when nothin‘,” said Mayella. “I said he does tollable.”
Mr. Ewell leaned back again.
“Except when he’s drinking?” asked Atticus so gently that Mayella nodded.
“Does he ever go after you?”
“How you mean?”
“When he’s—riled, has he ever beaten you?”
Mayella looked around, down at the court reporter, up at the judge. “Answer
the question, Miss Mayella,” said Judge Taylor.
“My paw’s never touched a hair o’my head in my life,” she declared firmly.
“He never touched me.”
Atticus’s glasses had slipped a little, and he pushed them up on his nose.
“We’ve had a good visit, Miss Mayella, and now I guess we’d better get to the
case. You say you asked Tom Robinson to come chop up a—what was it?”
“A chiffarobe, a old dresser full of drawers on one side.”
“Was Tom Robinson well known to you?”
“Whaddya mean?”
“I mean did you know who he was, where he lived?”
Mayella nodded. “I knowed who he was, he passed the house every day.”
“Was this the first time you asked him to come inside the fence?”
Mayella jumped slightly at the question. Atticus was making his slow
pilgrimage to the windows, as he had been doing: he would ask a question, then
look out, waiting for an answer. He did not see her involuntary jump, but it
seemed to me that he knew she had moved. He turned around and raised his
eyebrows. “Was—” he began again.
“Yes it was.”
“Didn’t you ever ask him to come inside the fence before?”
She was prepared now. “I did not, I certainly did not.”
“One did not’s enough,” said Atticus serenely. “You never asked him to do
odd jobs for you before?”
“I mighta,” conceded Mayella. “There was several niggers around.”
“Can you remember any other occasions?”
“No.”
“All right, now to what happened. You said Tom Robinson was behind you in
the room when you turned around, that right?”
“Yes.”
“You said he ‘got you around the neck cussing and saying dirt’—is that
right?”
“‘t’s right.”
Atticus’s memory had suddenly become accurate. “You say ‘he caught me
and choked me and took advantage of me’—is that right?”
“That’s what I said.”
“Do you remember him beating you about the face?”
The witness hesitated.
“You seem sure enough that he choked you. All this time you were fighting
back, remember? You ‘kicked and hollered as loud as you could.’ Do you
remember him beating you about the face?”
Mayella was silent. She seemed to be trying to get something clear to herself.
I thought for a moment she was doing Mr. Heck Tate’s and my trick of
pretending there was a person in front of us. She glanced at Mr. Gilmer.
“It’s an easy question, Miss Mayella, so I’ll try again. Do you remember him
beating you about the face?” Atticus’s voice had lost its comfortableness; he was
speaking in his arid, detached professional voice. “Do you remember him
beating you about the face?”
“No, I don’t recollect if he hit me. I mean yes I do, he hit me.”
“Was your last sentence your answer?”
“Huh? Yes, he hit—I just don’t remember, I just don’t remember . . . it all
happened so quick.”
Judge Taylor looked sternly at Mayella. “Don’t you cry, young woman—” he
began, but Atticus said, “Let her cry if she wants to, Judge. We’ve got all the
time in the world.”
Mayella sniffed wrathfully and looked at Atticus. “I’ll answer any question
you got—get me up here an‘ mock me, will you? I’ll answer any question you
got—”
“That’s fine,” said Atticus. “There’re only a few more. Miss Mayella, not to
be tedious, you’ve testified that the defendant hit you, grabbed you around the
neck, choked you, and took advantage of you. I want you to be sure you have the
right man. Will you identify the man who raped you?”
“I will, that’s him right yonder.”
Atticus turned to the defendant. “Tom, stand up. Let Miss Mayella have a
good long look at you. Is this the man, Miss Mayella?”
Tom Robinson’s powerful shoulders rippled under his thin shirt. He rose to
his feet and stood with his right hand on the back of his chair. He looked oddly
off balance, but it was not from the way he was standing. His left arm was fully
twelve inches shorter than his right, and hung dead at his side. It ended in a small
shriveled hand, and from as far away as the balcony I could see that it was no
use to him.
“Scout,” breathed Jem. “Scout, look! Reverend, he’s crippled!”
Reverend Sykes leaned across me and whispered to Jem. “He got it caught in
a cotton gin, caught it in Mr. Dolphus Raymond’s cotton gin when he was a boy
. . . like to bled to death . . . tore all the muscles loose from his bones—”
Atticus said, “Is this the man who raped you?”
“It most certainly is.”
Atticus’s next question was one word long. “How?”
Mayella was raging. “I don’t know how he done it, but he done it—I said it all
happened so fast I—”
“Now let’s consider this calmly—” began Atticus, but Mr. Gilmer interrupted
with an objection: he was not irrelevant or immaterial, but Atticus was
browbeating the witness.
Judge Taylor laughed outright. “Oh sit down, Horace, he’s doing nothing of
the sort. If anything, the witness’s browbeating Atticus.”
Judge Taylor was the only person in the courtroom who laughed. Even the
babies were still, and I suddenly wondered if they had been smothered at their
mothers’ breasts.
“Now,” said Atticus, “Miss Mayella, you’ve testified that the defendant
choked and beat you—you didn’t say that he sneaked up behind you and
knocked you cold, but you turned around and there he was—” Atticus was back
behind his table, and he emphasized his words by tapping his knuckles on it. “—
do you wish to reconsider any of your testimony?”
“You want me to say something that didn’t happen?”
“No ma’am, I want you to say something that did happen. Tell us once more,
please, what happened?”
“I told’ja what happened.”
“You testified that you turned around and there he was. He choked you then?”
“Yes.”
“Then he released your throat and hit you?”
“I said he did.”
“He blacked your left eye with his right fist?”
“I ducked and it—it glanced, that’s what it did. I ducked and it glanced off.”
Mayella had finally seen the light.
“You’re becoming suddenly clear on this point. A while ago you couldn’t
remember too well, could you?”
“I said he hit me.”
“All right. He choked you, he hit you, then he raped you, that right?”
“It most certainly is.”
“You’re a strong girl, what were you doing all the time, just standing there?”
“I told’ja I hollered’n‘kicked’n’fought—”
Atticus reached up and took off his glasses, turned his good right eye to the
witness, and rained questions on her. Judge Taylor said, “One question at a time,
Atticus. Give the witness a chance to answer.”
“All right, why didn’t you run?”
“I tried . . .”
“Tried to? What kept you from it?”
“I—he slung me down. That’s what he did, he slung me down’n got on top of
me.”
“You were screaming all this time?”
“I certainly was.”
“Then why didn’t the other children hear you? Where were they? At the
dump?”
“Where were they?”
No answer.
“Why didn’t your screams make them come running? The dump’s closer than
the woods, isn’t it?”
No answer.
“Or didn’t you scream until you saw your father in the window? You didn’t
think to scream until then, did you?”
No answer.
“Did you scream first at your father instead of at Tom Robinson? Was that
it?”
No answer.
“Who beat you up? Tom Robinson or your father?”
No answer.
“What did your father see in the window, the crime of rape or the best defense
to it? Why don’t you tell the truth, child, didn’t Bob Ewell beat you up?”
When Atticus turned away from Mayella he looked like his stomach hurt, but
Mayella’s face was a mixture of terror and fury. Atticus sat down wearily and
polished his glasses with his handkerchief.
Suddenly Mayella became articulate. “I got somethin‘ to say,” she said.
Atticus raised his head. “Do you want to tell us what happened?”
But she did not hear the compassion in his invitation. “I got somethin‘ to say
an’ then I ain’t gonna say no more. That nigger yonder took advantage of me an‘
if you fine fancy gentlemen don’t wanta do nothin’ about it then you’re all
yellow stinkin‘ cowards, stinkin’ cowards, the lot of you. Your fancy airs don’t
come to nothin‘—your ma’amin’ and Miss Mayellerin‘ don’t come to nothin’,
Mr. Finch—”
Then she burst into real tears. Her shoulders shook with angry sobs. She was
as good as her word. She answered no more questions, even when Mr. Gilmer
tried to get her back on the track. I guess if she hadn’t been so poor and ignorant,
Judge Taylor would have put her under the jail for the contempt she had shown
everybody in the courtroom. Somehow, Atticus had hit her hard in a way that
was not clear to me, but it gave him no pleasure to do so. He sat with his head
down, and I never saw anybody glare at anyone with the hatred Mayella showed
when she left the stand and walked by Atticus’s table.
When Mr. Gilmer told Judge Taylor that the state rested, Judge Taylor said,
“It’s time we all did. We’ll take ten minutes.”
Atticus and Mr. Gilmer met in front of the bench and whispered, then they left
the courtroom by a door behind the witness stand, which was a signal for us all
to stretch. I discovered that I had been sitting on the edge of the long bench, and
I was somewhat numb. Jem got up and yawned, Dill did likewise, and Reverend
Sykes wiped his face on his hat. The temperature was an easy ninety, he said.
Mr. Braxton Underwood, who had been sitting quietly in a chair reserved for
the Press, soaking up testimony with his sponge of a brain, allowed his bitter
eyes to rove over the colored balcony, and they met mine. He gave a snort and
looked away.
“Jem,” I said, “Mr. Underwood’s seen us.”
“That’s okay. He won’t tell Atticus, he’ll just put it on the social side of the
Tribune.” Jem turned back to Dill, explaining, I suppose, the finer points of the
trial to him, but I wondered what they were. There had been no lengthy debates
between Atticus and Mr. Gilmer on any points; Mr. Gilmer seemed to be
prosecuting almost reluctantly; witnesses had been led by the nose as asses are,
with few objections. But Atticus had once told us that in Judge Taylor’s court
any lawyer who was a strict constructionist on evidence usually wound up
receiving strict instructions from the bench. He distilled this for me to mean that
Judge Taylor might look lazy and operate in his sleep, but he was seldom
reversed, and that was the proof of the pudding. Atticus said he was a good
judge.
Presently Judge Taylor returned and climbed into his swivel chair. He took a
cigar from his vest pocket and examined it thoughtfully. I punched Dill. Having
passed the judge’s inspection, the cigar suffered a vicious bite. “We come down
sometimes to watch him,” I explained. “It’s gonna take him the rest of the
afternoon, now. You watch.” Unaware of public scrutiny from above, Judge
Taylor disposed of the severed end by propelling it expertly to his lips and
saying, “Fhluck!” He hit a spittoon so squarely we could hear it slosh. “Bet he
was hell with a spitball,” murmured Dill.
As a rule, a recess meant a general exodus, but today people weren’t moving.
Even the Idlers who had failed to shame younger men from their seats had
remained standing along the walls. I guess Mr. Heck Tate had reserved the
county toilet for court officials.
Atticus and Mr. Gilmer returned, and Judge Taylor looked at his watch. “It’s
gettin‘ on to four,” he said, which was intriguing, as the courthouse clock must
have struck the hour at least twice. I had not heard it or felt its vibrations.
“Shall we try to wind up this afternoon?” asked Judge Taylor. “How ‘bout it,
Atticus?”
“I think we can,” said Atticus.
“How many witnesses you got?”
“One.”
“Well, call him.”
19
T
homas Robinson reached around, ran his fingers under his left arm and lifted
it. He guided his arm to the Bible and his rubber-like left hand sought contact
with the black binding. As he raised his right hand, the useless one slipped off
the Bible and hit the clerk’s table. He was trying again when Judge Taylor
growled, “That’ll do, Tom.” Tom took the oath and stepped into the witness
chair. Atticus very quickly induced him to tell us: Tom was twenty-five years of
age; he was married with three children; he had been in trouble with the law
before: he once received thirty days for disorderly conduct.
“It must have been disorderly,” said Atticus. “What did it consist of?”
“Got in a fight with another man, he tried to cut me.”
“Did he succeed?”
“Yes suh, a little, not enough to hurt. You see, I—” Tom moved his left
shoulder.
“Yes,” said Atticus. “You were both convicted?”
“Yes suh, I had to serve ‘cause I couldn’t pay the fine. Other fellow paid
his’n.”
Dill leaned across me and asked Jem what Atticus was doing. Jem said Atticus
was showing the jury that Tom had nothing to hide.
“Were you acquainted with Mayella Violet Ewell?” asked Atticus.
“Yes suh, I had to pass her place goin‘ to and from the field every day.”
“Whose field?”
“I picks for Mr. Link Deas.”
“Were you picking cotton in November?”
“No suh, I works in his yard fall an‘ wintertime. I works pretty steady for him
all year round, he’s got a lot of pecan trees’n things.”
“You say you had to pass the Ewell place to get to and from work. Is there any
other way to go?”
“No suh, none’s I know of.”
“Tom, did she ever speak to you?”
“Why, yes suh, I’d tip m’hat when I’d go by, and one day she asked me to
come inside the fence and bust up a chiffarobe for her.”
“When did she ask you to chop up the—the chiffarobe?”
“Mr. Finch, it was way last spring. I remember it because it was choppin‘ time
and I had my hoe with me. I said I didn’t have nothin’ but this hoe, but she said
she had a hatchet. She give me the hatchet and I broke up the chiffarobe. She
said, ‘I reckon I’ll hafta give you a nickel, won’t I?’ an‘ I said, ’No ma’am, there
ain’t no charge.‘ Then I went home. Mr. Finch, that was way last spring, way
over a year ago.”
“Did you ever go on the place again?”
“Yes suh.”
“When?”
“Well, I went lots of times.”
Judge Taylor instinctively reached for his gavel, but let his hand fall. The
murmur below us died without his help.
“Under what circumstances?”
“Please, suh?”
“Why did you go inside the fence lots of times?”
Tom Robinson’s forehead relaxed. “She’d call me in, suh. Seemed like every
time I passed by yonder she’d have some little somethin‘ for me to do—
choppin’ kindlin‘, totin’ water for her. She watered them red flowers every day
—”
“Were you paid for your services?”
“No suh, not after she offered me a nickel the first time. I was glad to do it,
Mr. Ewell didn’t seem to help her none, and neither did the chillun, and I
knowed she didn’t have no nickels to spare.”
“Where were the other children?”
“They was always around, all over the place. They’d watch me work, some of
‘em, some of ’em’d set in the window.”
“Would Miss Mayella talk to you?”
“Yes sir, she talked to me.”
As Tom Robinson gave his testimony, it came to me that Mayella Ewell must
have been the loneliest person in the world. She was even lonelier than Boo
Radley, who had not been out of the house in twenty-five years. When Atticus
asked had she any friends, she seemed not to know what he meant, then she
thought he was making fun of her. She was as sad, I thought, as what Jem called
a mixed child: white people wouldn’t have anything to do with her because she
lived among pigs; Negroes wouldn’t have anything to do with her because she
was white. She couldn’t live like Mr. Dolphus Raymond, who preferred the
company of Negroes, because she didn’t own a riverbank and she wasn’t from a
fine old family. Nobody said, “That’s just their way,” about the Ewells.
Maycomb gave them Christmas baskets, welfare money, and the back of its
hand. Tom Robinson was probably the only person who was ever decent to her.
But she said he took advantage of her, and when she stood up she looked at him
as if he were dirt beneath her feet.
“Did you ever,” Atticus interrupted my meditations, “at any time, go on the
Ewell property—did you ever set foot on the Ewell property without an express
invitation from one of them?”
“No suh, Mr. Finch, I never did. I wouldn’t do that, suh.”
Atticus sometimes said that one way to tell whether a witness was lying or
telling the truth was to listen rather than watch: I applied his test—Tom denied it
three times in one breath, but quietly, with no hint of whining in his voice, and I
found myself believing him in spite of his protesting too much. He seemed to be
a respectable Negro, and a respectable Negro would never go up into
somebody’s yard of his own volition.
“Tom, what happened to you on the evening of November twenty-first of last
year?”
Below us, the spectators drew a collective breath and leaned forward. Behind
us, the Negroes did the same.
Tom was a black-velvet Negro, not shiny, but soft black velvet. The whites of
his eyes shone in his face, and when he spoke we saw flashes of his teeth. If he
had been whole, he would have been a fine specimen of a man.
“Mr. Finch,” he said, “I was goin‘ home as usual that evenin’, an‘ when I
passed the Ewell place Miss Mayella were on the porch, like she said she were.
It seemed real quiet like, an’ I didn’t quite know why. I was studyin‘ why, just
passin’ by, when she says for me to come there and help her a minute. Well, I
went inside the fence an‘ looked around for some kindlin’ to work on, but I
didn’t see none, and she says, ‘Naw, I got somethin’ for you to do in the house.
Th‘ old door’s off its hinges an’ fall’s comin‘ on pretty fast.’ I said you got a
screwdriver, Miss Mayella? She said she sho‘ had. Well, I went up the steps an’
she motioned me to come inside, and I went in the front room an‘ looked at the
door. I said Miss Mayella, this door look all right. I pulled it back’n forth and
those hinges was all right. Then she shet the door in my face. Mr. Finch, I was
wonderin’ why it was so quiet like, an‘ it come to me that there weren’t a chile
on the place, not a one of ’em, and I said Miss Mayella, where the chillun?”
Tom’s black velvet skin had begun to shine, and he ran his hand over his face.
“I say where the chillun?” he continued, “an‘ she says—she was laughin’, sort
of—she says they all gone to town to get ice creams. She says, ‘took me a slap
year to save seb’m nickels, but I done it. They all gone to town.’”
Tom’s discomfort was not from the humidity. “What did you say then, Tom?”
asked Atticus.
“I said somethin‘ like, why Miss Mayella, that’s right smart o’you to treat
’em. An‘ she said, ’You think so?‘ I don’t think she understood what I was
thinkin’—I meant it was smart of her to save like that, an‘ nice of her to treat
em.”
“I understand you, Tom. Go on,” said Atticus.
“Well, I said I best be goin‘, I couldn’t do nothin’ for her, an‘ she says oh yes
I could, an’ I ask her what, and she says to just step on that chair yonder an‘ git
that box down from on top of the chiffarobe.”
“Not the same chiffarobe you busted up?” asked Atticus.
The witness smiled. “Naw suh, another one. Most as tall as the room. So I
done what she told me, an‘ I was just reachin’ when the next thing I knows she
—she’d grabbed me round the legs, grabbed me round th‘ legs, Mr. Finch. She
scared me so bad I hopped down an’ turned the chair over—that was the only
thing, only furniture, ‘sturbed in that room, Mr. Finch, when I left it. I swear
’fore God.”
“What happened after you turned the chair over?”
Tom Robinson had come to a dead stop. He glanced at Atticus, then at the
jury, then at Mr. Underwood sitting across the room.
“Tom, you’re sworn to tell the whole truth. Will you tell it?”
Tom ran his hand nervously over his mouth.
“What happened after that?”
“Answer the question,” said Judge Taylor. One-third of his cigar had
vanished.
“Mr. Finch, I got down offa that chair an‘ turned around an’ she sorta jumped
on me.”
“Jumped on you? Violently?”
“No suh, she—she hugged me. She hugged me round the waist.”
This time Judge Taylor’s gavel came down with a bang, and as it did the
overhead lights went on in the courtroom. Darkness had not come, but the
afternoon sun had left the windows. Judge Taylor quickly restored order.
“Then what did she do?”
The witness swallowed hard. “She reached up an‘ kissed me ’side of th‘ face.
She says she never kissed a grown man before an’ she might as well kiss a
nigger. She says what her papa do to her don’t count. She says, ‘Kiss me back,
nigger.’ I say Miss Mayella lemme outa here an‘ tried to run but she got her back
to the door an’ I’da had to push her. I didn’t wanta harm her, Mr. Finch, an‘ I say
lemme pass, but just when I say it Mr. Ewell yonder hollered through th’
window.”
“What did he say?”
Tom Robinson swallowed again, and his eyes widened. “Somethin‘ not fittin’
to say—not fittin‘ for these folks’n chillun to hear—”
“What did he say, Tom? You must tell the jury what he said.”
Tom Robinson shut his eyes tight. “He says you goddamn whore, I’ll kill ya.”
“Then what happened?”
“Mr. Finch, I was runnin‘ so fast I didn’t know what happened.”
“Tom, did you rape Mayella Ewell?”
“I did not, suh.”
“Did you harm her in any way?”
“I did not, suh.”
“Did you resist her advances?”
“Mr. Finch, I tried. I tried to ‘thout bein’ ugly to her. I didn’t wanta be ugly, I
didn’t wanta push her or nothin‘.”
It occurred to me that in their own way, Tom Robinson’s manners were as
good as Atticus’s. Until my father explained it to me later, I did not understand
the subtlety of Tom’s predicament: he would not have dared strike a white
woman under any circumstances and expect to live long, so he took the first
opportunity to run—a sure sign of guilt.
“Tom, go back once more to Mr. Ewell,” said Atticus. “Did he say anything to
you?”
“Not anything, suh. He mighta said somethin‘, but I weren’t there—”
“That’ll do,” Atticus cut in sharply. “What you did hear, who was he talking
to?”
“Mr. Finch, he were talkin‘ and lookin’ at Miss Mayella.”
“Then you ran?”
“I sho‘ did, suh.”
“Why did you run?”
“I was scared, suh.”
“Why were you scared?”
“Mr. Finch, if you was a nigger like me, you’d be scared, too.”
Atticus sat down. Mr. Gilmer was making his way to the witness stand, but
before he got there Mr. Link Deas rose from the audience and announced: “I just
want the whole lot of you to know one thing right now. That boy’s worked for
me eight years an‘ I ain’t had a speck o’trouble outa him. Not a speck.”
“Shut your mouth, sir!” Judge Taylor was wide awake and roaring. He was
also pink in the face. His speech was miraculously unimpaired by his cigar.
“Link Deas,” he yelled, “if you have anything you want to say you can say it
under oath and at the proper time, but until then you get out of this room, you
hear me? Get out of this room, sir, you hear me? I’ll be damned if I’ll listen to
this case again!”
Judge Taylor looked daggers at Atticus, as if daring him to speak, but Atticus
had ducked his head and was laughing into his lap. I remembered something he
had said about Judge Taylor’s ex cathedra remarks sometimes exceeding his
duty, but that few lawyers ever did anything about them. I looked at Jem, but
Jem shook his head. “It ain’t like one of the jurymen got up and started talking,”
he said. “I think it’d be different then. Mr. Link was just disturbin‘ the peace or
something.”
Judge Taylor told the reporter to expunge anything he happened to have
written down after Mr. Finch if you were a nigger like me you’d be scared too,
and told the jury to disregard the interruption. He looked suspiciously down the
middle aisle and waited, I suppose, for Mr. Link Deas to effect total departure.
Then he said, “Go ahead, Mr. Gilmer.”
“You were given thirty days once for disorderly conduct, Robinson?” asked
Mr. Gilmer.
“Yes suh.”
“What’d the nigger look like when you got through with him?”
“He beat me, Mr. Gilmer.”
“Yes, but you were convicted, weren’t you?”
Atticus raised his head. “It was a misdemeanor and it’s in the record, Judge.” I
thought he sounded tired.
“Witness’ll answer, though,” said Judge Taylor, just as wearily.
“Yes suh, I got thirty days.”
I knew that Mr. Gilmer would sincerely tell the jury that anyone who was
convicted of disorderly conduct could easily have had it in his heart to take
advantage of Mayella Ewell, that was the only reason he cared. Reasons like that
helped.
“Robinson, you’re pretty good at busting up chiffarobes and kindling with one
hand, aren’t you?”
“Yes, suh, I reckon so.”
“Strong enough to choke the breath out of a woman and sling her to the
floor?”
“I never done that, suh.”
“But you are strong enough to?”
“I reckon so, suh.”
“Had your eye on her a long time, hadn’t you, boy?”
“No suh, I never looked at her.”
“Then you were mighty polite to do all that chopping and hauling for her,
weren’t you, boy?”
“I was just tryin‘ to help her out, suh.”
“That was mighty generous of you, you had chores at home after your regular
work, didn’t you?”
“Yes suh.”
“Why didn’t you do them instead of Miss Ewell’s?”
“I done ‘em both, suh.”
“You must have been pretty busy. Why?”
“Why what, suh?”
“Why were you so anxious to do that woman’s chores?”
Tom Robinson hesitated, searching for an answer. “Looked like she didn’t
have nobody to help her, like I says—”
“With Mr. Ewell and seven children on the place, boy?”
“Well, I says it looked like they never help her none—”
“You did all this chopping and work from sheer goodness, boy?”
“Tried to help her, I says.”
Mr. Gilmer smiled grimly at the jury. “You’re a mighty good fellow, it seems
—did all this for not one penny?”
“Yes, suh. I felt right sorry for her, she seemed to try more’n the rest of ‘em
—”
“You felt sorry for her, you felt sorry for he?” Mr. Gilmer seemed ready to
rise to the ceiling.
The witness realized his mistake and shifted uncomfortably in the chair. But
the damage was done. Below us, nobody liked Tom Robinson’s answer. Mr.
Gilmer paused a long time to let it sink in.
“Now you went by the house as usual, last November twenty-first,” he said,
“and she asked you to come in and bust up a chiffarobe?”
“No suh.”
“Do you deny that you went by the house?”
“No suh—she said she had somethin‘ for me to do inside the house—”
“She says she asked you to bust up a chiffarobe, is that right?”
“No suh, it ain’t.”
“Then you say she’s lying, boy?”
Atticus was on his feet, but Tom Robinson didn’t need him. “I don’t say she’s
lyin‘, Mr. Gilmer, I say she’s mistaken in her mind.”
To the next ten questions, as Mr. Gilmer reviewed Mayella’s version of
events, the witness’s steady answer was that she was mistaken in her mind.
“Didn’t Mr. Ewell run you off the place, boy?”
“No suh, I don’t think he did.”
“Don’t think, what do you mean?”
“I mean I didn’t stay long enough for him to run me off.”
“You’re very candid about this, why did you run so fast?”
“I says I was scared, suh.”
“If you had a clear conscience, why were you scared?”
“Like I says before, it weren’t safe for any nigger to be in a—fix like that.”
“But you weren’t in a fix—you testified that you were resisting Miss Ewell.
Were you so scared that she’d hurt you, you ran, a big buck like you?”
“No suh, I’s scared I’d be in court, just like I am now.”
“Scared of arrest, scared you’d have to face up to what you did?”
“No suh, scared I’d hafta face up to what I didn’t do.”
“Are you being impudent to me, boy?”
“No suh, I didn’t go to be.”
This was as much as I heard of Mr. Gilmer’s cross-examination, because Jem
made me take Dill out. For some reason Dill had started crying and couldn’t
stop; quietly at first, then his sobs were heard by several people in the balcony.
Jem said if I didn’t go with him he’d make me, and Reverend Sykes said I’d
better go, so I went. Dill had seemed to be all right that day, nothing wrong with
him, but I guessed he hadn’t fully recovered from running away.
“Ain’t you feeling good?” I asked, when we reached the bottom of the stairs.
Dill tried to pull himself together as we ran down the south steps. Mr. Link
Deas was a lonely figure on the top step. “Anything happenin‘, Scout?” he asked
as we went by. “No sir,” I answered over my shoulder. “Dill here, he’s sick.”
“Come on out under the trees,” I said. “Heat got you, I expect.” We chose the
fattest live oak and we sat under it.
“It was just him I couldn’t stand,” Dill said.
“Who, Tom?”
“That old Mr. Gilmer doin‘ him thataway, talking so hateful to him—”
“Dill, that’s his job. Why, if we didn’t have prosecutors—well, we couldn’t
have defense attorneys, I reckon.”
Dill exhaled patiently. “I know all that, Scout. It was the way he said it made
me sick, plain sick.”
“He’s supposed to act that way, Dill, he was cross—”
“He didn’t act that way when—”
“Dill, those were his own witnesses.”
“Well, Mr. Finch didn’t act that way to Mayella and old man Ewell when he
cross-examined them. The way that man called him ‘boy’ all the time an‘
sneered at him, an’ looked around at the jury every time he answered—”
“Well, Dill, after all he’s just a Negro.”
“I don’t care one speck. It ain’t right, somehow it ain’t right to do ‘em that
way. Hasn’t anybody got any business talkin’ like that—it just makes me sick.”
“That’s just Mr. Gilmer’s way, Dill, he does ‘em all that way. You’ve never
seen him get good’n down on one yet. Why, when—well, today Mr. Gilmer
seemed to me like he wasn’t half trying. They do ’em all that way, most lawyers,
I mean.”
“Mr. Finch doesn’t.”
“He’s not an example, Dill, he’s—” I was trying to grope in my memory for a
sharp phrase of Miss Maudie Atkinson’s. I had it: “He’s the same in the
courtroom as he is on the public streets.”
“That’s not what I mean,” said Dill.
“I know what you mean, boy,” said a voice behind us. We thought it came
from the tree-trunk, but it belonged to Mr. Dolphus Raymond. He peered around
the trunk at us. “You aren’t thin-hided, it just makes you sick, doesn’t it?”
20
“C
ome on round here, son, I got something that’ll settle your stomach.”
As Mr. Dolphus Raymond was an evil man I accepted his invitation
reluctantly, but I followed Dill. Somehow, I didn’t think Atticus would like it if
we became friendly with Mr. Raymond, and I knew Aunt Alexandra wouldn’t.
“Here,” he said, offering Dill his paper sack with straws in it. “Take a good
sip, it’ll quieten you.”
Dill sucked on the straws, smiled, and pulled at length.
“Hee hee,” said Mr. Raymond, evidently taking delight in corrupting a child.
“Dill, you watch out, now,” I warned.
Dill released the straws and grinned. “Scout, it’s nothing but Coca-Cola.”
Mr. Raymond sat up against the tree-trunk. He had been lying on the grass.
“You little folks won’t tell on me now, will you? It’d ruin my reputation if you
did.”
“You mean all you drink in that sack’s Coca-Cola? Just plain Coca-Cola?”
“Yes ma’am,” Mr. Raymond nodded. I liked his smell: it was of leather,
horses, cottonseed. He wore the only English riding boots I had ever seen.
“That’s all I drink, most of the time.”
“Then you just pretend you’re half—? I beg your pardon, sir,” I caught
myself. “I didn’t mean to be—”
Mr. Raymond chuckled, not at all offended, and I tried to frame a discreet
question: “Why do you do like you do?”
“Wh—oh yes, you mean why do I pretend? Well, it’s very simple,” he said.
“Some folks don’t—like the way I live. Now I could say the hell with ‘em, I
don’t care if they don’t like it. I do say I don’t care if they don’t like it, right
enough—but I don’t say the hell with ’em, see?”
Dill and I said, “No sir.”
“I try to give ‘em a reason, you see. It helps folks if they can latch onto a
reason. When I come to town, which is seldom, if I weave a little and drink out
of this sack, folks can say Dolphus Raymond’s in the clutches of whiskey—
that’s why he won’t change his ways. He can’t help himself, that’s why he lives
the way he does.”
“That ain’t honest, Mr. Raymond, making yourself out badder’n you are
already—”
“It ain’t honest but it’s mighty helpful to folks. Secretly, Miss Finch, I’m not
much of a drinker, but you see they could never, never understand that I live like
I do because that’s the way I want to live.”
I had a feeling that I shouldn’t be here listening to this sinful man who had
mixed children and didn’t care who knew it, but he was fascinating. I had never
encountered a being who deliberately perpetrated fraud against himself. But why
had he entrusted us with his deepest secret? I asked him why.
“Because you’re children and you can understand it,” he said, “and because I
heard that one—”
He jerked his head at Dill: “Things haven’t caught up with that one’s instinct
yet. Let him get a little older and he won’t get sick and cry. Maybe things’ll
strike him as being—not quite right, say, but he won’t cry, not when he gets a
few years on him.”
“Cry about what, Mr. Raymond?” Dill’s maleness was beginning to assert
itself.
“Cry about the simple hell people give other people—without even thinking.
Cry about the hell white people give colored folks, without even stopping to
think that they’re people, too.”
“Atticus says cheatin‘ a colored man is ten times worse than cheatin’ a white
man,” I muttered. “Says it’s the worst thing you can do.”
Mr. Raymond said, “I don’t reckon it’s—Miss Jean Louise, you don’t know
your pa’s not a run-of-the-mill man, it’ll take a few years for that to sink in—you
haven’t seen enough of the world yet. You haven’t even seen this town, but all
you gotta do is step back inside the courthouse.”
Which reminded me that we were missing nearly all of Mr. Gilmer’s cross-
examination. I looked at the sun, and it was dropping fast behind the store-tops
on the west side of the square. Between two fires, I could not decide which I
wanted to jump into: Mr. Raymond or the 5th Judicial Circuit Court. “C’mon,
Dill,” I said. “You all right, now?”
“Yeah. Glad t’ve metcha, Mr. Raymond, and thanks for the drink, it was
mighty settlin‘.”
We raced back to the courthouse, up the steps, up two flights of stairs, and
edged our way along the balcony rail. Reverend Sykes had saved our seats.
The courtroom was still, and again I wondered where the babies were. Judge
Taylor’s cigar was a brown speck in the center of his mouth; Mr. Gilmer was
writing on one of the yellow pads on his table, trying to outdo the court reporter,
whose hand was jerking rapidly. “Shoot,” I muttered, “we missed it.”
Atticus was halfway through his speech to the jury. He had evidently pulled
some papers from his briefcase that rested beside his chair, because they were on
his table. Tom Robinson was toying with them.
“. . . absence of any corroborative evidence, this man was indicted on a capital
charge and is now on trial for his life . . .”
I punched Jem. “How long’s he been at it?”
“He’s just gone over the evidence,” Jem whispered, “and we’re gonna win,
Scout. I don’t see how we can’t. He’s been at it ‘bout five minutes. He made it as
plain and easy as—well, as I’da explained it to you. You could’ve understood it,
even.”
“Did Mr. Gilmer—?”
“Sh-h. Nothing new, just the usual. Hush now.”
We looked down again. Atticus was speaking easily, with the kind of
detachment he used when he dictated a letter. He walked slowly up and down in
front of the jury, and the jury seemed to be attentive: their heads were up, and
they followed Atticus’s route with what seemed to be appreciation. I guess it was
because Atticus wasn’t a thunderer.
Atticus paused, then he did something he didn’t ordinarily do. He unhitched
his watch and chain and placed them on the table, saying, “With the court’s
permission—”
Judge Taylor nodded, and then Atticus did something I never saw him do
before or since, in public or in private: he unbuttoned his vest, unbuttoned his
collar, loosened his tie, and took off his coat. He never loosened a scrap of his
clothing until he undressed at bedtime, and to Jem and me, this was the
equivalent of him standing before us stark naked. We exchanged horrified
glances.
Atticus put his hands in his pockets, and as he returned to the jury, I saw his
gold collar button and the tips of his pen and pencil winking in the light.
“Gentlemen,” he said. Jem and I again looked at each other: Atticus might
have said, “Scout.” His voice had lost its aridity, its detachment, and he was
talking to the jury as if they were folks on the post office corner.
“Gentlemen,” he was saying, “I shall be brief, but I would like to use my
remaining time with you to remind you that this case is not a difficult one, it
requires no minute sifting of complicated facts, but it does require you to be sure
beyond all reasonable doubt as to the guilt of the defendant. To begin with, this
case should never have come to trial. This case is as simple as black and white.
“The state has not produced one iota of medical evidence to the effect that the
crime Tom Robinson is charged with ever took place. It has relied instead upon
the testimony of two witnesses whose evidence has not only been called into
serious question on cross-examination, but has been flatly contradicted by the
defendant. The defendant is not guilty, but somebody in this courtroom is.
“I have nothing but pity in my heart for the chief witness for the state, but my
pity does not extend so far as to her putting a man’s life at stake, which she has
done in an effort to get rid of her own guilt.
“I say guilt, gentlemen, because it was guilt that motivated her. She has
committed no crime, she has merely broken a rigid and time-honored code of our
society, a code so severe that whoever breaks it is hounded from our midst as
unfit to live with. She is the victim of cruel poverty and ignorance, but I cannot
pity her: she is white. She knew full well the enormity of her offense, but
because her desires were stronger than the code she was breaking, she persisted
in breaking it. She persisted, and her subsequent reaction is something that all of
us have known at one time or another. She did something every child has done—
she tried to put the evidence of her offense away from her. But in this case she
was no child hiding stolen contraband: she struck out at her victim—of necessity
she must put him away from her—he must be removed from her presence, from
this world. She must destroy the evidence of her offense.
“What was the evidence of her offense? Tom Robinson, a human being. She
must put Tom Robinson away from her. Tom Robinson was her daily reminder
of what she did. What did she do? She tempted a Negro.
“She was white, and she tempted a Negro. She did something that in our
society is unspeakable: she kissed a black man. Not an old Uncle, but a strong
young Negro man. No code mattered to her before she broke it, but it came
crashing down on her afterwards.
“Her father saw it, and the defendant has testified as to his remarks. What did
her father do? We don’t know, but there is circumstantial evidence to indicate
that Mayella Ewell was beaten savagely by someone who led almost exclusively
with his left. We do know in part what Mr. Ewell did: he did what any God-
fearing, persevering, respectable white man would do under the circumstances—
he swore out a warrant, no doubt signing it with his left hand, and Tom
Robinson now sits before you, having taken the oath with the only good hand he
possesses—his right hand.
“And so a quiet, respectable, humble Negro who had the unmitigated temerity
to ‘feel sorry’ for a white woman has had to put his word against two white
people’s. I need not remind you of their appearance and conduct on the stand—
you saw them for yourselves. The witnesses for the state, with the exception of
the sheriff of Maycomb County, have presented themselves to you gentlemen, to
this court, in the cynical confidence that their testimony would not be doubted,
confident that you gentlemen would go along with them on the assumption—the
evil assumption—that all Negroes lie, that all Negroes are basically immoral
beings, that all Negro men are not to be trusted around our women, an
assumption one associates with minds of their caliber.
“Which, gentlemen, we know is in itself a lie as black as Tom Robinson’s
skin, a lie I do not have to point out to you. You know the truth, and the truth is
this: some Negroes lie, some Negroes are immoral, some Negro men are not to
be trusted around women—black or white. But this is a truth that applies to the
human race and to no particular race of men. There is not a person in this
courtroom who has never told a lie, who has never done an immoral thing, and
there is no man living who has never looked upon a woman without desire.”
Atticus paused and took out his handkerchief. Then he took off his glasses and
wiped them, and we saw another “first”: we had never seen him sweat—he was
one of those men whose faces never perspired, but now it was shining tan.
“One more thing, gentlemen, before I quit. Thomas Jefferson once said that all
men are created equal, a phrase that the Yankees and the distaff side of the
Executive branch in Washington are fond of hurling at us. There is a tendency in
this year of grace, 1935, for certain people to use this phrase out of context, to
satisfy all conditions. The most ridiculous example I can think of is that the
people who run public education promote the stupid and idle along with the
industrious—because all men are created equal, educators will gravely tell you,
the children left behind suffer terrible feelings of inferiority. We know all men
are not created equal in the sense some people would have us believe—some
people are smarter than others, some people have more opportunity because
they’re born with it, some men make more money than others, some ladies make
better cakes than others—some people are born gifted beyond the normal scope
of most men.
“But there is one way in this country in which all men are created equal—
there is one human institution that makes a pauper the equal of a Rockefeller, the
stupid man the equal of an Einstein, and the ignorant man the equal of any
college president. That institution, gentlemen, is a court. It can be the Supreme
Court of the United States or the humblest J.P. court in the land, or this
honorable court which you serve. Our courts have their faults, as does any
human institution, but in this country our courts are the great levelers, and in our
courts all men are created equal.
“I’m no idealist to believe firmly in the integrity of our courts and in the jury
system—that is no ideal to me, it is a living, working reality. Gentlemen, a court
is no better than each man of you sitting before me on this jury. A court is only
as sound as its jury, and a jury is only as sound as the men who make it up. I am
confident that you gentlemen will review without passion the evidence you have
heard, come to a decision, and restore this defendant to his family. In the name
of God, do your duty.”
Atticus’s voice had dropped, and as he turned away from the jury he said
something I did not catch. He said it more to himself than to the court. I punched
Jem. “What’d he say?”
“‘In the name of God, believe him,’ I think that’s what he said.”
Dill suddenly reached over me and tugged at Jem. “Looka yonder!”
We followed his finger with sinking hearts. Calpurnia was making her way up
the middle aisle, walking straight toward Atticus.
21
S
he stopped shyly at the railing and waited to get Judge Taylor’s attention. She
was in a fresh apron and she carried an envelope in her hand.
Judge Taylor saw her and said, “It’s Calpurnia, isn’t it?”
“Yes sir,” she said. “Could I just pass this note to Mr. Finch, please sir? It
hasn’t got anything to do with—with the trial.”
Judge Taylor nodded and Atticus took the envelope from Calpurnia. He
opened it, read its contents and said, “Judge, I—this note is from my sister. She
says my children are missing, haven’t turned up since noon . . . I . . . could you
—”
“I know where they are, Atticus.” Mr. Underwood spoke up. “They’re right up
yonder in the colored balcony—been there since precisely one-eighteen P.M.”
Our father turned around and looked up. “Jem, come down from there,” he
called. Then he said something to the Judge we didn’t hear. We climbed across
Reverend Sykes and made our way to the staircase.
Atticus and Calpurnia met us downstairs. Calpurnia looked peeved, but
Atticus looked exhausted.
Jem was jumping in excitement. “We’ve won, haven’t we?”
“I’ve no idea,” said Atticus shortly. “You’ve been here all afternoon? Go
home with Calpurnia and get your supper—and stay home.”
“Aw, Atticus, let us come back,” pleaded Jem. “Please let us hear the verdict,
please sir.”
“The jury might be out and back in a minute, we don’t know—” but we could
tell Atticus was relenting. “Well, you’ve heard it all, so you might as well hear
the rest. Tell you what, you all can come back when you’ve eaten your supper—
eat slowly, now, you won’t miss anything important—and if the jury’s still out,
you can wait with us. But I expect it’ll be over before you get back.”
“You think they’ll acquit him that fast?” asked Jem.
Atticus opened his mouth to answer, but shut it and left us.
I prayed that Reverend Sykes would save our seats for us, but stopped praying
when I remembered that people got up and left in droves when the jury was out
—tonight, they’d overrun the drugstore, the O.K. Café and the hotel, that is,
unless they had brought their suppers too.
Calpurnia marched us home: “—skin every one of you alive, the very idea,
you children listenin‘ to all that! Mister Jem, don’t you know better’n to take
your little sister to that trial? Miss Alexandra’ll absolutely have a stroke of
paralysis when she finds out! Ain’t fittin’ for children to hear . . .”
The streetlights were on, and we glimpsed Calpurnia’s indignant profile as we
passed beneath them. “Mister Jem, I thought you was gettin‘ some kinda head on
your shoulders—the very idea, she’s your little sister! The very idea, sir! You
oughta be perfectly ashamed of yourself—ain’t you got any sense at all?”
I was exhilarated. So many things had happened so fast I felt it would take
years to sort them out, and now here was Calpurnia giving her precious Jem
down the country—what new marvels would the evening bring?
Jem was chuckling. “Don’t you want to hear about it, Cal?”
“Hush your mouth, sir! When you oughta be hangin‘ your head in shame you
go along laughin’—” Calpurnia revived a series of rusty threats that moved Jem
to little remorse, and she sailed up the front steps with her classic, “If Mr. Finch
don’t wear you out, I will—get in that house, sir!”
Jem went in grinning, and Calpurnia nodded tacit consent to having Dill in to
supper. “You all call Miss Rachel right now and tell her where you are,” she told
him. “She’s run distracted lookin‘ for you—you watch out she don’t ship you
back to Meridian first thing in the mornin’.”
Aunt Alexandra met us and nearly fainted when Calpurnia told her where we
were. I guess it hurt her when we told her Atticus said we could go back,
because she didn’t say a word during supper. She just rearranged food on her
plate, looking at it sadly while Calpurnia served Jem, Dill and me with a
vengeance. Calpurnia poured milk, dished out potato salad and ham, muttering,
“‘shamed of yourselves,” in varying degrees of intensity. “Now you all eat
slow,” was her final command.
Reverend Sykes had saved our places. We were surprised to find that we had
been gone nearly an hour, and were equally surprised to find the courtroom
exactly as we had left it, with minor changes: the jury box was empty, the
defendant was gone; Judge Taylor had been gone, but he reappeared as we were
seating ourselves.
“Nobody’s moved, hardly,” said Jem.
“They moved around some when the jury went out,” said Reverend Sykes.
“The menfolk down there got the womenfolk their suppers, and they fed their
babies.”
“How long have they been out?” asked Jem.
“‘bout thirty minutes. Mr. Finch and Mr. Gilmer did some more talkin’, and
Judge Taylor charged the jury.”
“How was he?” asked Jem.
“What say? Oh, he did right well. I ain’t complainin‘ one bit—he was mighty
fair-minded. He sorta said if you believe this, then you’ll have to return one
verdict, but if you believe this, you’ll have to return another one. I thought he
was leanin’ a little to our side—” Reverend Sykes scratched his head.
Jem smiled. “He’s not supposed to lean, Reverend, but don’t fret, we’ve won
it,” he said wisely. “Don’t see how any jury could convict on what we heard—”
“Now don’t you be so confident, Mr. Jem, I ain’t ever seen any jury decide in
favor of a colored man over a white man . . .” But Jem took exception to
Reverend Sykes, and we were subjected to a lengthy review of the evidence with
Jem’s ideas on the law regarding rape: it wasn’t rape if she let you, but she had
to be eighteen—in Alabama, that is—and Mayella was nineteen. Apparently you
had to kick and holler, you had to be overpowered and stomped on, preferably
knocked stone cold. If you were under eighteen, you didn’t have to go through
all this.
“Mr. Jem,” Reverend Sykes demurred, “this ain’t a polite thing for little ladies
to hear . . .”
“Aw, she doesn’t know what we’re talkin‘ about,” said Jem. “Scout, this is too
old for you, ain’t it?”
“It most certainly is not, I know every word you’re saying.” Perhaps I was too
convincing, because Jem hushed and never discussed the subject again.
“What time is it, Reverend?” he asked.
“Gettin‘ on toward eight.”
I looked down and saw Atticus strolling around with his hands in his pockets:
he made a tour of the windows, then walked by the railing over to the jury box.
He looked in it, inspected Judge Taylor on his throne, then went back to where
he started. I caught his eye and waved to him. He acknowledged my salute with
a nod, and resumed his tour.
Mr. Gilmer was standing at the windows talking to Mr. Underwood. Bert, the
court reporter, was chain-smoking: he sat back with his feet on the table.
But the officers of the court, the ones present—Atticus, Mr. Gilmer, Judge
Taylor sound asleep, and Bert, were the only ones whose behavior seemed
normal. I had never seen a packed courtroom so still. Sometimes a baby would
cry out fretfully, and a child would scurry out, but the grown people sat as if they
were in church. In the balcony, the Negroes sat and stood around us with biblical
patience.
The old courthouse clock suffered its preliminary strain and struck the hour,
eight deafening bongs that shook our bones.
When it bonged eleven times I was past feeling: tired from fighting sleep, I
allowed myself a short nap against Reverend Sykes’s comfortable arm and
shoulder. I jerked awake and made an honest effort to remain so, by looking
down and concentrating on the heads below: there were sixteen bald ones,
fourteen men that could pass for redheads, forty heads varying between brown
and black, and—I remembered something Jem had once explained to me when
he went through a brief period of psychical research: he said if enough people—
a stadium full, maybe—were to concentrate on one thing, such as setting a tree
afire in the woods, that the tree would ignite of its own accord. I toyed with the
idea of asking everyone below to concentrate on setting Tom Robinson free, but
thought if they were as tired as I, it wouldn’t work.
Dill was sound asleep, his head on Jem’s shoulder, and Jem was quiet.
“Ain’t it a long time?” I asked him.
“Sure is, Scout,” he said happily.
“Well, from the way you put it, it’d just take five minutes.”
Jem raised his eyebrows. “There are things you don’t understand,” he said,
and I was too weary to argue.
But I must have been reasonably awake, or I would not have received the
impression that was creeping into me. It was not unlike one I had last winter, and
I shivered, though the night was hot. The feeling grew until the atmosphere in
the courtroom was exactly the same as a cold February morning, when the
mockingbirds were still, and the carpenters had stopped hammering on Miss
Maudie’s new house, and every wood door in the neighborhood was shut as tight
as the doors of the Radley Place. A deserted, waiting, empty street, and the
courtroom was packed with people. A steaming summer night was no different
from a winter morning. Mr. Heck Tate, who had entered the courtroom and was
talking to Atticus, might have been wearing his high boots and lumber jacket.
Atticus had stopped his tranquil journey and had put his foot onto the bottom
rung of a chair; as he listened to what Mr. Tate was saying, he ran his hand
slowly up and down his thigh. I expected Mr. Tate to say any minute, “Take
him, Mr. Finch . . .”
But Mr. Tate said, “This court will come to order,” in a voice that rang with
authority, and the heads below us jerked up. Mr. Tate left the room and returned
with Tom Robinson. He steered Tom to his place beside Atticus, and stood there.
Judge Taylor had roused himself to sudden alertness and was sitting up straight,
looking at the empty jury box.
What happened after that had a dreamlike quality: in a dream I saw the jury
return, moving like underwater swimmers, and Judge Taylor’s voice came from
far away and was tiny. I saw something only a lawyer’s child could be expected
to see, could be expected to watch for, and it was like watching Atticus walk into
the street, raise a rifle to his shoulder and pull the trigger, but watching all the
time knowing that the gun was empty.
A jury never looks at a defendant it has convicted, and when this jury came in,
not one of them looked at Tom Robinson. The foreman handed a piece of paper
to Mr. Tate who handed it to the clerk who handed it to the judge . . .
I shut my eyes. Judge Taylor was polling the jury: “Guilty . . . guilty . . . guilty
. . . guilty . . .” I peeked at Jem: his hands were white from gripping the balcony
rail, and his shoulders jerked as if each “guilty” was a separate stab between
them.
Judge Taylor was saying something. His gavel was in his fist, but he wasn’t
using it. Dimly, I saw Atticus pushing papers from the table into his briefcase.
He snapped it shut, went to the court reporter and said something, nodded to Mr.
Gilmer, and then went to Tom Robinson and whispered something to him.
Atticus put his hand on Tom’s shoulder as he whispered. Atticus took his coat
off the back of his chair and pulled it over his shoulder. Then he left the
courtroom, but not by his usual exit. He must have wanted to go home the short
way, because he walked quickly down the middle aisle toward the south exit. I
followed the top of his head as he made his way to the door. He did not look up.
Someone was punching me, but I was reluctant to take my eyes from the
people below us, and from the image of Atticus’s lonely walk down the aisle.
“Miss Jean Louise?”
I looked around. They were standing. All around us and in the balcony on the
opposite wall, the Negroes were getting to their feet. Reverend Sykes’s voice
was as distant as Judge Taylor’s:
“Miss Jean Louise, stand up. Your father’s passin‘.”
22
I
t was Jem’s turn to cry. His face was streaked with angry tears as we made our
way through the cheerful crowd. “It ain’t right,” he muttered, all the way to the
corner of the square where we found Atticus waiting. Atticus was standing under
the street light looking as though nothing had happened: his vest was buttoned,
his collar and tie were neatly in place, his watch-chain glistened, he was his
impassive self again.
“It ain’t right, Atticus,” said Jem.
“No son, it’s not right.”
We walked home.
Aunt Alexandra was waiting up. She was in her dressing gown, and I could
have sworn she had on her corset underneath it. “I’m sorry, brother,” she
murmured. Having never heard her call Atticus “brother” before, I stole a glance
at Jem, but he was not listening. He would look up at Atticus, then down at the
floor, and I wondered if he thought Atticus somehow responsible for Tom
Robinson’s conviction.
“Is he all right?” Aunty asked, indicating Jem.
“He’ll be so presently,” said Atticus. “It was a little too strong for him.” Our
father sighed. “I’m going to bed,” he said. “If I don’t wake up in the morning,
don’t call me.”
“I didn’t think it wise in the first place to let them—”
“This is their home, sister,” said Atticus. “We’ve made it this way for them,
they might as well learn to cope with it.”
“But they don’t have to go to the courthouse and wallow in it—”
“It’s just as much Maycomb County as missionary teas.”
“Atticus—” Aunt Alexandra’s eyes were anxious. “You are the last person I
thought would turn bitter over this.”
“I’m not bitter, just tired. I’m going to bed.”
“Atticus—” said Jem bleakly.
He turned in the doorway. “What, son?”
“How could they do it, how could they?”
“I don’t know, but they did it. They’ve done it before and they did it tonight
and they’ll do it again and when they do it—seems that only children weep.
Good night.”
But things are always better in the morning. Atticus rose at his usual ungodly
hour and was in the livingroom behind the Mobile Register when we stumbled
in. Jem’s morning face posed the question his sleepy lips struggled to ask.
“It’s not time to worry yet,” Atticus reassured him, as we went to the
diningroom. “We’re not through yet. There’ll be an appeal, you can count on
that. Gracious alive, Cal, what’s all this?” He was staring at his breakfast plate.
Calpurnia said, “Tom Robinson’s daddy sent you along this chicken this
morning. I fixed it.”
“You tell him I’m proud to get it—bet they don’t have chicken for breakfast at
the White House. What are these?”
“Rolls,” said Calpurnia. “Estelle down at the hotel sent ‘em.”
Atticus looked up at her, puzzled, and she said, “You better step out here and
see what’s in the kitchen, Mr. Finch.”
We followed him. The kitchen table was loaded with enough food to bury the
family: hunks of salt pork, tomatoes, beans, even scuppernongs. Atticus grinned
when he found a jar of pickled pigs’ knuckles. “Reckon Aunty’ll let me eat these
in the diningroom?”
Calpurnia said, “This was all ‘round the back steps when I got here this
morning. They—they ’preciate what you did, Mr. Finch. They—they aren’t
oversteppin‘ themselves, are they?”
Atticus’s eyes filled with tears. He did not speak for a moment. “Tell them
I’m very grateful,” he said. “Tell them—tell them they must never do this again.
Times are too hard . . .”
He left the kitchen, went in the diningroom and excused himself to Aunt
Alexandra, put on his hat and went to town.
We heard Dill’s step in the hall, so Calpurnia left Atticus’s uneaten breakfast
on the table. Between rabbit-bites Dill told us of Miss Rachel’s reaction to last
night, which was: if a man like Atticus Finch wants to butt his head against a
stone wall it’s his head.
“I’da got her told,” growled Dill, gnawing a chicken leg, “but she didn’t look
much like tellin‘ this morning. Said she was up half the night wonderin’ where I
was, said she’da had the sheriff after me but he was at the hearing.”
“Dill, you’ve got to stop goin‘ off without tellin’ her,” said Jem. “It just
aggravates her.”
Dill sighed patiently. “I told her till I was blue in the face where I was goin‘—
she’s just seein’ too many snakes in the closet. Bet that woman drinks a pint for
breakfast every morning—know she drinks two glasses full. Seen her.”
“Don’t talk like that, Dill,” said Aunt Alexandra. “It’s not becoming to a
child. It’s—cynical.”
“I ain’t cynical, Miss Alexandra. Tellin‘ the truth’s not cynical, is it?”
“The way you tell it, it is.”
Jem’s eyes flashed at her, but he said to Dill, “Let’s go. You can take that
runner with you.”
When we went to the front porch, Miss Stephanie Crawford was busy telling it
to Miss Maudie Atkinson and Mr. Avery. They looked around at us and went on
talking. Jem made a feral noise in his throat. I wished for a weapon.
“I hate grown folks lookin‘ at you,” said Dill. “Makes you feel like you’ve
done something.”
Miss Maudie yelled for Jem Finch to come there.
Jem groaned and heaved himself up from the swing. “We’ll go with you,” Dill
said.
Miss Stephanie’s nose quivered with curiosity. She wanted to know who all
gave us permission to go to court—she didn’t see us but it was all over town this
morning that we were in the Colored balcony. Did Atticus put us up there as a
sort of—? Wasn’t it right close up there with all those—? Did Scout understand
all the—? Didn’t it make us mad to see our daddy beat?
“Hush, Stephanie.” Miss Maudie’s diction was deadly. “I’ve not got all the
morning to pass on the porch—Jem Finch, I called to find out if you and your
colleagues can eat some cake. Got up at five to make it, so you better say yes.
Excuse us, Stephanie. Good morning, Mr. Avery.”
There was a big cake and two little ones on Miss Maudie’s kitchen table.
There should have been three little ones. It was not like Miss Maudie to forget
Dill, and we must have shown it. But we understood when she cut from the big
cake and gave the slice to Jem.
As we ate, we sensed that this was Miss Maudie’s way of saying that as far as
she was concerned, nothing had changed. She sat quietly in a kitchen chair,
watching us.
Suddenly she spoke: “Don’t fret, Jem. Things are never as bad as they seem.”
Indoors, when Miss Maudie wanted to say something lengthy she spread her
fingers on her knees and settled her bridgework. This she did, and we waited.
“I simply want to tell you that there are some men in this world who were
born to do our unpleasant jobs for us. Your father’s one of them.”
“Oh,” said Jem. “Well.”
“Don’t you oh well me, sir,” Miss Maudie replied, recognizing Jem’s fatalistic
noises, “you are not old enough to appreciate what I said.”
Jem was staring at his half-eaten cake. “It’s like bein‘ a caterpillar in a
cocoon, that’s what it is,” he said. “Like somethin’ asleep wrapped up in a warm
place. I always thought Maycomb folks were the best folks in the world, least
that’s what they seemed like.”
“We’re the safest folks in the world,” said Miss Maudie. “We’re so rarely
called on to be Christians, but when we are, we’ve got men like Atticus to go for
us.”
Jem grinned ruefully. “Wish the rest of the county thought that.”
“You’d be surprised how many of us do.”
“Who?” Jem’s voice rose. “Who in this town did one thing to help Tom
Robinson, just who?”
“His colored friends for one thing, and people like us. People like Judge
Taylor. People like Mr. Heck Tate. Stop eating and start thinking, Jem. Did it
ever strike you that Judge Taylor naming Atticus to defend that boy was no
accident? That Judge Taylor might have had his reasons for naming him?”
This was a thought. Court-appointed defenses were usually given to Maxwell
Green, Maycomb’s latest addition to the bar, who needed the experience.
Maxwell Green should have had Tom Robinson’s case.
“You think about that,” Miss Maudie was saying. “It was no accident. I was
sittin‘ there on the porch last night, waiting. I waited and waited to see you all
come down the sidewalk, and as I waited I thought, Atticus Finch won’t win, he
can’t win, but he’s the only man in these parts who can keep a jury out so long in
a case like that. And I thought to myself, well, we’re making a step—it’s just a
baby-step, but it’s a step.”
“‘t’s all right to talk like that—can’t any Christian judges an’ lawyers make up
for heathen juries,” Jem muttered. “Soon’s I get grown—”
“That’s something you’ll have to take up with your father,” Miss Maudie said.
We went down Miss Maudie’s cool new steps into the sunshine and found Mr.
Avery and Miss Stephanie Crawford still at it. They had moved down the
sidewalk and were standing in front of Miss Stephanie’s house. Miss Rachel was
walking toward them.
“I think I’ll be a clown when I get grown,” said Dill.
Jem and I stopped in our tracks.
“Yes sir, a clown,” he said. “There ain’t one thing in this world I can do about
folks except laugh, so I’m gonna join the circus and laugh my head off.”
“You got it backwards, Dill,” said Jem. “Clowns are sad, it’s folks that laugh
at them.”
“Well I’m gonna be a new kind of clown. I’m gonna stand in the middle of the
ring and laugh at the folks. Just looka yonder,” he pointed. “Every one of ‘em
oughta be ridin’ broomsticks. Aunt Rachel already does.”
Miss Stephanie and Miss Rachel were waving wildly at us, in a way that did
not give the lie to Dill’s observation.
“Oh gosh,” breathed Jem. “I reckon it’d be ugly not to see ‘em.”
Something was wrong. Mr. Avery was red in the face from a sneezing spell
and nearly blew us off the sidewalk when we came up. Miss Stephanie was
trembling with excitement, and Miss Rachel caught Dill’s shoulder. “You get on
in the back yard and stay there,” she said. “There’s danger a’comin‘.”
“‘s matter?” I asked.
“Ain’t you heard yet? It’s all over town—”
At that moment Aunt Alexandra came to the door and called us, but she was
too late. It was Miss Stephanie’s pleasure to tell us: this morning Mr. Bob Ewell
stopped Atticus on the post office corner, spat in his face, and told him he’d get
him if it took the rest of his life.
23
“I
wish Bob Ewell wouldn’t chew tobacco,” was all Atticus said about it.
According to Miss Stephanie Crawford, however, Atticus was leaving the post
office when Mr. Ewell approached him, cursed him, spat on him, and threatened
to kill him. Miss Stephanie (who, by the time she had told it twice was there and
had seen it all—passing by from the Jitney Jungle, she was)—Miss Stephanie
said Atticus didn’t bat an eye, just took out his handkerchief and wiped his face
and stood there and let Mr. Ewell call him names wild horses could not bring her
to repeat. Mr. Ewell was a veteran of an obscure war; that plus Atticus’s
peaceful reaction probably prompted him to inquire, “Too proud to fight, you
nigger-lovin‘ bastard?” Miss Stephanie said Atticus said, “No, too old,” put his
hands in his pockets and strolled on. Miss Stephanie said you had to hand it to
Atticus Finch, he could be right dry sometimes.
Jem and I didn’t think it entertaining.
“After all, though,” I said, “he was the deadest shot in the county one time. He
could—”
“You know he wouldn’t carry a gun, Scout. He ain’t even got one—” said
Jem. “You know he didn’t even have one down at the jail that night. He told me
havin‘ a gun around’s an invitation to somebody to shoot you.”
“This is different,” I said. “We can ask him to borrow one.”
We did, and he said, “Nonsense.”
Dill was of the opinion that an appeal to Atticus’s better nature might work:
after all, we would starve if Mr. Ewell killed him, besides be raised exclusively
by Aunt Alexandra, and we all knew the first thing she’d do before Atticus was
under the ground good would be to fire Calpurnia. Jem said it might work if I
cried and flung a fit, being young and a girl. That didn’t work either. But when
he noticed us dragging around the neighborhood, not eating, taking little interest
in our normal pursuits, Atticus discovered how deeply frightened we were. He
tempted Jem with a new football magazine one night; when he saw Jem flip the
pages and toss it aside, he said, “What’s bothering you, son?”
Jem came to the point: “Mr. Ewell.”
“What has happened?”
“Nothing’s happened. We’re scared for you, and we think you oughta do
something about him.”
Atticus smiled wryly. “Do what? Put him under a peace bond?”
“When a man says he’s gonna get you, looks like he means it.”
“He meant it when he said it,” said Atticus. “Jem, see if you can stand in Bob
Ewell’s shoes a minute. I destroyed his last shred of credibility at that trial, if he
had any to begin with. The man had to have some kind of comeback, his kind
always does. So if spitting in my face and threatening me saved Mayella Ewell
one extra beating, that’s something I’ll gladly take. He had to take it out on
somebody and I’d rather it be me than that houseful of children out there. You
understand?”
Jem nodded.
Aunt Alexandra entered the room as Atticus was saying, “We don’t have
anything to fear from Bob Ewell, he got it all out of his system that morning.”
“I wouldn’t be so sure of that, Atticus,” she said. “His kind’d do anything to
pay off a grudge. You know how those people are.”
“What on earth could Ewell do to me, sister?”
“Something furtive,” Aunt Alexandra said. “You may count on that.”
“Nobody has much chance to be furtive in Maycomb,” Atticus answered.
After that, we were not afraid. Summer was melting away, and we made the
most of it. Atticus assured us that nothing would happen to Tom Robinson until
the higher court reviewed his case, and that Tom had a good chance of going
free, or at least of having a new trial. He was at Enfield Prison Farm, seventy
miles away in Chester County. I asked Atticus if Tom’s wife and children were
allowed to visit him, but Atticus said no.
“If he loses his appeal,” I asked one evening, “what’ll happen to him?”
“He’ll go to the chair,” said Atticus, “unless the Governor commutes his
sentence. Not time to worry yet, Scout. We’ve got a good chance.”
Jem was sprawled on the sofa reading Popular Mechanics. He looked up. “It
ain’t right. He didn’t kill anybody even if he was guilty. He didn’t take
anybody’s life.”
“You know rape’s a capital offense in Alabama,” said Atticus.
“Yessir, but the jury didn’t have to give him death—if they wanted to they
could’ve gave him twenty years.”
“Given,” said Atticus. “Tom Robinson’s a colored man, Jem. No jury in this
part of the world’s going to say, ‘We think you’re guilty, but not very,’ on a
charge like that. It was either a straight acquittal or nothing.”
Jem was shaking his head. “I know it’s not right, but I can’t figure out what’s
wrong—maybe rape shouldn’t be a capital offense . . .”
Atticus dropped his newspaper beside his chair. He said he didn’t have any
quarrel with the rape statute, none what ever, but he did have deep misgivings
when the state asked for and the jury gave a death penalty on purely
circumstantial evidence. He glanced at me, saw I was listening, and made it
easier. “—I mean, before a man is sentenced to death for murder, say, there
should be one or two eye-witnesses. Some one should be able to say, ‘Yes, I was
there and saw him pull the trigger.’”
“But lots of folks have been hung—hanged—on circumstantial evidence,”
said Jem.
“I know, and lots of ‘em probably deserved it, too—but in the absence of eye-
witnesses there’s always a doubt, some times only the shadow of a doubt. The
law says ’reasonable doubt,‘ but I think a defendant’s entitled to the shadow of a
doubt. There’s always the possibility, no matter how improbable, that he’s
innocent.”
“Then it all goes back to the jury, then. We oughta do away with juries.” Jem
was adamant.
Atticus tried hard not to smile but couldn’t help it. “You’re rather hard on us,
son. I think maybe there might be a better way. Change the law. Change it so
that only judges have the power of fixing the penalty in capital cases.”
“Then go up to Montgomery and change the law.”
“You’d be surprised how hard that’d be. I won’t live to see the law changed,
and if you live to see it you’ll be an old man.”
This was not good enough for Jem. “No sir, they oughta do away with juries.
He wasn’t guilty in the first place and they said he was.”
“If you had been on that jury, son, and eleven other boys like you, Tom would
be a free man,” said Atticus. “So far nothing in your life has interfered with your
reasoning process. Those are twelve reasonable men in everyday life, Tom’s
jury, but you saw something come between them and reason. You saw the same
thing that night in front of the jail. When that crew went away, they didn’t go as
reasonable men, they went because we were there. There’s something in our
world that makes men lose their heads—they couldn’t be fair if they tried. In our
courts, when it’s a white man’s word against a black man’s, the white man
always wins. They’re ugly, but those are the facts of life.”
“Doesn’t make it right,” said Jem stolidly. He beat his fist softly on his knee.
“You just can’t convict a man on evidence like that—you can’t.”
“You couldn’t, but they could and did. The older you grow the more of it
you’ll see. The one place where a man ought to get a square deal is in a
courtroom, be he any color of the rainbow, but people have a way of carrying
their resentments right into a jury box. As you grow older, you’ll see white men
cheat black men every day of your life, but let me tell you something and don’t
you forget it—whenever a white man does that to a black man, no matter who he
is, how rich he is, or how fine a family he comes from, that white man is trash.”
Atticus was speaking so quietly his last word crashed on our ears. I looked up,
and his face was vehement. “There’s nothing more sickening to me than a low-
grade white man who’ll take advantage of a Negro’s ignorance. Don’t fool
yourselves—it’s all adding up and one of these days we’re going to pay the bill
for it. I hope it’s not in you children’s time.”
Jem was scratching his head. Suddenly his eyes widened. “Atticus,” he said,
“why don’t people like us and Miss Maudie ever sit on juries? You never see
anybody from Maycomb on a jury—they all come from out in the woods.”
Atticus leaned back in his rocking-chair. For some reason he looked pleased
with Jem. “I was wondering when that’d occur to you,” he said. “There are lots
of reasons. For one thing, Miss Maudie can’t serve on a jury because she’s a
woman—”
“You mean women in Alabama can’t—?” I was indignant.
“I do. I guess it’s to protect our frail ladies from sordid cases like Tom’s.
Besides,” Atticus grinned, “I doubt if we’d ever get a complete case tried—the
ladies’d be interrupting to ask questions.”
Jem and I laughed. Miss Maudie on a jury would be impressive. I thought of
old Mrs. Dubose in her wheelchair—“Stop that rapping, John Taylor, I want to
ask this man something.” Perhaps our forefathers were wise.
Atticus was saying, “With people like us—that’s our share of the bill. We
generally get the juries we deserve. Our stout Maycomb citizens aren’t
interested, in the first place. In the second place, they’re afraid. Then, they’re—”
“Afraid, why?” asked Jem.
“Well, what if—say, Mr. Link Deas had to decide the amount of damages to
award, say, Miss Maudie, when Miss Rachel ran over her with a car. Link
wouldn’t like the thought of losing either lady’s business at his store, would he?
So he tells Judge Taylor that he can’t serve on the jury because he doesn’t have
anybody to keep store for him while he’s gone. So Judge Taylor excuses him.
Sometimes he excuses him wrathfully.”
“What’d make him think either one of ‘em’d stop trading with him?” I asked.
Jem said, “Miss Rachel would, Miss Maudie wouldn’t. But a jury’s vote’s
secret, Atticus.”
Our father chuckled. “You’ve many more miles to go, son. A jury’s vote’s
supposed to be secret. Serving on a jury forces a man to make up his mind and
declare himself about something. Men don’t like to do that. Sometimes it’s
unpleasant.”
“Tom’s jury sho‘ made up its mind in a hurry,” Jem muttered.
Atticus’s fingers went to his watchpocket. “No it didn’t,” he said, more to
himself than to us. “That was the one thing that made me think, well, this may be
the shadow of a beginning. That jury took a few hours. An inevitable verdict,
maybe, but usually it takes ‘em just a few minutes. This time—” he broke off
and looked at us. “You might like to know that there was one fellow who took
considerable wearing down—in the beginning he was rarin’ for an outright
acquittal.”
“Who?” Jem was astonished.
Atticus’s eyes twinkled. “It’s not for me to say, but I’ll tell you this much. He
was one of your Old Sarum friends . . .”
“One of the Cunninghams?” Jem yelped. “One of—I didn’t recognize any of
‘em . . . you’re jokin’.” He looked at Atticus from the corners of his eyes.
“One of their connections. On a hunch, I didn’t strike him. Just on a hunch.
Could’ve, but I didn’t.”
“Golly Moses,” Jem said reverently. “One minute they’re tryin‘ to kill him
and the next they’re tryin’ to turn him loose . . . I’ll never understand those folks
as long as I live.”
Atticus said you just had to know ‘em. He said the Cunninghams hadn’t taken
anything from or off of anybody since they migrated to the New World. He said
the other thing about them was, once you earned their respect they were for you
tooth and nail. Atticus said he had a feeling, nothing more than a suspicion, that
they left the jail that night with considerable respect for the Finches. Then too,
he said, it took a thunderbolt plus another Cunningham to make one of them
change his mind. “If we’d had two of that crowd, we’d’ve had a hung jury.”
Jem said slowly, “You mean you actually put on the jury a man who wanted
to kill you the night before? How could you take such a risk, Atticus, how could
you?”
“When you analyze it, there was little risk. There’s no difference between one
man who’s going to convict and another man who’s going to convict, is there?
There’s a faint difference between a man who’s going to convict and a man
who’s a little disturbed in his mind, isn’t there? He was the only uncertainty on
the whole list.”
“What kin was that man to Mr. Walter Cunningham?” I asked.
Atticus rose, stretched and yawned. It was not even our bedtime, but we knew
he wanted a chance to read his newspaper. He picked it up, folded it, and tapped
my head. “Let’s see now,” he droned to himself. “I’ve got it. Double first
cousin.”
“How can that be?”
“Two sisters married two brothers. That’s all I’ll tell you—you figure it out.”
I tortured myself and decided that if I married Jem and Dill had a sister whom
he married our children would be double first cousins. “Gee minetti, Jem,” I
said, when Atticus had gone, “they’re funny folks. ‘d you hear that, Aunty?”
Aunt Alexandra was hooking a rug and not watching us, but she was listening.
She sat in her chair with her workbasket beside it, her rug spread across her lap.
Why ladies hooked woolen rugs on boiling nights never became clear to me.
“I heard it,” she said.
I remembered the distant disastrous occasion when I rushed to young Walter
Cunningham’s defense. Now I was glad I’d done it. “Soon’s school starts I’m
gonna ask Walter home to dinner,” I planned, having forgotten my private
resolve to beat him up the next time I saw him. “He can stay over sometimes
after school, too. Atticus could drive him back to Old Sarum. Maybe he could
spend the night with us sometime, okay, Jem?”
“We’ll see about that,” Aunt Alexandra said, a declaration that with her was
always a threat, never a promise. Surprised, I turned to her. “Why not, Aunty?
They’re good folks.”
She looked at me over her sewing glasses. “Jean Louise, there is no doubt in
my mind that they’re good folks. But they’re not our kind of folks.”
Jem says, “She means they’re yappy, Scout.”
“What’s a yap?”
“Aw, tacky. They like fiddlin‘ and things like that.”
“Well I do too—”
“Don’t be silly, Jean Louise,” said Aunt Alexandra. “The thing is, you can
scrub Walter Cunningham till he shines, you can put him in shoes and a new
suit, but he’ll never be like Jem. Besides, there’s a drinking streak in that family
a mile wide. Finch women aren’t interested in that sort of people.”
“Aun-ty,” said Jem, “she ain’t nine yet.”
“She may as well learn it now.”
Aunt Alexandra had spoken. I was reminded vividly of the last time she had
put her foot down. I never knew why. It was when I was absorbed with plans to
visit Calpurnia’s house—I was curious, interested; I wanted to be her
“company,” to see how she lived, who her friends were. I might as well have
wanted to see the other side of the moon. This time the tactics were different, but
Aunt Alexandra’s aim was the same. Perhaps this was why she had come to live
with us—to help us choose our friends. I would hold her off as long as I could:
“If they’re good folks, then why can’t I be nice to Walter?”
“I didn’t say not to be nice to him. You should be friendly and polite to him,
you should be gracious to everybody, dear. But you don’t have to invite him
home.”
“What if he was kin to us, Aunty?”
“The fact is that he is not kin to us, but if he were, my answer would be the
same.”
“Aunty,” Jem spoke up, “Atticus says you can choose your friends but you
sho‘ can’t choose your family, an’ they’re still kin to you no matter whether you
acknowledge ‘em or not, and it makes you look right silly when you don’t.”
“That’s your father all over again,” said Aunt Alexandra, “and I still say that
Jean Louise will not invite Walter Cunningham to this house. If he were her
double first cousin once removed he would still not be received in this house
unless he comes to see Atticus on business. Now that is that.”
She had said Indeed Not, but this time she would give her reasons: “But I
want to play with Walter, Aunty, why can’t I?”
She took off her glasses and stared at me. “I’ll tell you why,” she said.
“Because—he—is—trash, that’s why you can’t play with him. I’ll not have you
around him, picking up his habits and learning Lord-knows-what. You’re
enough of a problem to your father as it is.”
I don’t know what I would have done, but Jem stopped me. He caught me by
the shoulders, put his arm around me, and led me sobbing in fury to his
bedroom. Atticus heard us and poked his head around the door. “‘s all right, sir,”
Jem said gruffly, “’s not anything.” Atticus went away.
“Have a chew, Scout.” Jem dug into his pocket and extracted a Tootsie Roll. It
took a few minutes to work the candy into a comfortable wad inside my jaw.
Jem was rearranging the objects on his dresser. His hair stuck up behind and
down in front, and I wondered if it would ever look like a man’s—maybe if he
shaved it off and started over, his hair would grow back neatly in place. His
eyebrows were becoming heavier, and I noticed a new slimness about his body.
He was growing taller. When he looked around, he must have thought I would
start crying again, for he said, “Show you something if you won’t tell anybody.”
I said what. He unbuttoned his shirt, grinning shyly.
“Well what?”
“Well can’t you see it?”
“Well no.”
“Well it’s hair.”
“Where?”
“There. Right there.”
He had been a comfort to me, so I said it looked lovely, but I didn’t see
anything. “It’s real nice, Jem.”
“Under my arms, too,” he said. “Goin‘ out for football next year. Scout, don’t
let Aunty aggravate you.”
It seemed only yesterday that he was telling me not to aggravate Aunty.
“You know she’s not used to girls,” said Jem, “leastways, not girls like you.
She’s trying to make you a lady. Can’t you take up sewin‘ or somethin’?”
“Hell no. She doesn’t like me, that’s all there is to it, and I don’t care. It was
her callin‘ Walter Cunningham trash that got me goin’, Jem, not what she said
about being a problem to Atticus. We got that all straight one time, I asked him
if I was a problem and he said not much of one, at most one that he could always
figure out, and not to worry my head a second about botherin‘ him. Naw, it was
Walter—that boy’s not trash, Jem. He ain’t like the Ewells.”
Jem kicked off his shoes and swung his feet to the bed. He propped himself
against a pillow and switched on the reading light. “You know something,
Scout? I’ve got it all figured out, now. I’ve thought about it a lot lately and I’ve
got it figured out. There’s four kinds of folks in the world. There’s the ordinary
kind like us and the neighbors, there’s the kind like the Cunninghams out in the
woods, the kind like the Ewells down at the dump, and the Negroes.”
“What about the Chinese, and the Cajuns down yonder in Baldwin County?”
“I mean in Maycomb County. The thing about it is, our kind of folks don’t
like the Cunninghams, the Cunninghams don’t like the Ewells, and the Ewells
hate and despise the colored folks.”
I told Jem if that was so, then why didn’t Tom’s jury, made up of folks like
the Cunninghams, acquit Tom to spite the Ewells?“
Jem waved my question away as being infantile.
“You know,” he said, “I’ve seen Atticus pat his foot when there’s fiddlin‘ on
the radio, and he loves pot liquor better’n any man I ever saw—”
“Then that makes us like the Cunninghams,” I said. “I can’t see why Aunty
—”
“No, lemme finish—it does, but we’re still different somehow. Atticus said
one time the reason Aunty’s so hipped on the family is because all we’ve got’s
background and not a dime to our names.”
“Well Jem, I don’t know—Atticus told me one time that most of this Old
Family stuff’s foolishness because everybody’s family’s just as old as everybody
else’s. I said did that include the colored folks and Englishmen and he said yes.”
“Background doesn’t mean Old Family,” said Jem. “I think it’s how long your
family’s been readin‘ and writin’. Scout, I’ve studied this real hard and that’s the
only reason I can think of. Somewhere along when the Finches were in Egypt
one of ‘em must have learned a hieroglyphic or two and he taught his boy.” Jem
laughed. “Imagine Aunty being proud her great-grandaddy could read an’ write
—ladies pick funny things to be proud of.”
“Well I’m glad he could, or who’da taught Atticus and them, and if Atticus
couldn’t read, you and me’d be in a fix. I don’t think that’s what background is,
Jem.”
“Well then, how do you explain why the Cunninghams are different? Mr.
Walter can hardly sign his name, I’ve seen him. We’ve just been readin‘ and
writin’ longer’n they have.”
“No, everybody’s gotta learn, nobody’s born knowin‘. That Walter’s as smart
as he can be, he just gets held back sometimes because he has to stay out and
help his daddy. Nothin’s wrong with him. Naw, Jem, I think there’s just one kind
of folks. Folks.”
Jem turned around and punched his pillow. When he settled back his face was
cloudy. He was going into one of his declines, and I grew wary. His brows came
together; his mouth became a thin line. He was silent for a while.
“That’s what I thought, too,” he said at last, “when I was your age. If there’s
just one kind of folks, why can’t they get along with each other? If they’re all
alike, why do they go out of their way to despise each other? Scout, I think I’m
beginning to understand something. I think I’m beginning to understand why
Boo Radley’s stayed shut up in the house all this time . . . it’s because he wants
to stay inside.”
24
C
alpurnia wore her stiffest starched apron. She carried a tray of charlotte. She
backed up to the swinging door and pressed gently. I admired the ease and grace
with which she handled heavy loads of dainty things. So did Aunt Alexandra, I
guess, because she had let Calpurnia serve today.
August was on the brink of September. Dill would be leaving for Meridian
tomorrow; today he was off with Jem at Barker’s Eddy. Jem had discovered with
angry amazement that nobody had ever bothered to teach Dill how to swim, a
skill Jem considered necessary as walking. They had spent two afternoons at the
creek, they said they were going in naked and I couldn’t come, so I divided the
lonely hours between Calpurnia and Miss Maudie.
Today Aunt Alexandra and her missionary circle were fighting the good fight
all over the house. From the kitchen, I heard Mrs. Grace Merriweather giving a
report in the livingroom on the squalid lives of the Mrunas, it sounded like to
me. They put the women out in huts when their time came, whatever that was;
they had no sense of family—I knew that’d distress Aunty—they subjected
children to terrible ordeals when they were thirteen; they were crawling with
yaws and earworms, they chewed up and spat out the bark of a tree into a
communal pot and then got drunk on it.
Immediately thereafter, the ladies adjourned for refreshments.
I didn’t know whether to go into the diningroom or stay out. Aunt Alexandra
told me to join them for refreshments; it was not necessary that I attend the
business part of the meeting, she said it’d bore me. I was wearing my pink
Sunday dress, shoes, and a petticoat, and reflected that if I spilled anything
Calpurnia would have to wash my dress again for tomorrow. This had been a
busy day for her. I decided to stay out.
“Can I help you, Cal?” I asked, wishing to be of some service.
Calpurnia paused in the doorway. “You be still as a mouse in that corner,” she
said, “an‘ you can help me load up the trays when I come back.”
The gentle hum of ladies’ voices grew louder as she opened the door: “Why,
Alexandra, I never saw such charlotte . . . just lovely . . . I never can get my crust
like this, never can . . . who’d‘ve thought of little dewberry tarts . . . Calpurnia? .
. . who’da thought it . . . anybody tell you that the preacher’s wife’s . . . nooo,
well she is, and that other one not walkin’ yet . . .”
They became quiet, and I knew they had all been served. Calpurnia returned
and put my mother’s heavy silver pitcher on a tray. “This coffee pitcher’s a
curiosity,” she murmured, “they don’t make ‘em these days.”
“Can I carry it in?”
“If you be careful and don’t drop it. Set it down at the end of the table by Miss
Alexandra. Down there by the cups’n things. She’s gonna pour.”
I tried pressing my behind against the door as Calpurnia had done, but the
door didn’t budge. Grinning, she held it open for me. “Careful now, it’s heavy.
Don’t look at it and you won’t spill it.”
My journey was successful: Aunt Alexandra smiled brilliantly. “Stay with us,
Jean Louise,” she said. This was a part of her campaign to teach me to be a lady.
It was customary for every circle hostess to invite her neighbors in for
refreshments, be they Baptists or Presbyterians, which accounted for the
presence of Miss Rachel (sober as a judge), Miss Maudie and Miss Stephanie
Crawford. Rather nervous, I took a seat beside Miss Maudie and wondered why
ladies put on their hats to go across the street. Ladies in bunches always filled
me with vague apprehension and a firm desire to be elsewhere, but this feeling
was what Aunt Alexandra called being “spoiled.”
The ladies were cool in fragile pastel prints: most of them were heavily
powdered but unrouged; the only lipstick in the room was Tangee Natural. Cutex
Natural sparkled on their fingernails, but some of the younger ladies wore Rose.
They smelled heavenly. I sat quietly, having conquered my hands by tightly
gripping the arms of the chair, and waited for someone to speak to me.
Miss Maudie’s gold bridgework twinkled. “You’re mighty dressed up, Miss
Jean Louise,” she said, “Where are your britches today?”
“Under my dress.”
I hadn’t meant to be funny, but the ladies laughed. My cheeks grew hot as I
realized my mistake, but Miss Maudie looked gravely down at me. She never
laughed at me unless I meant to be funny.
In the sudden silence that followed, Miss Stephanie Crawford called from
across the room, “Whatcha going to be when you grow up, Jean Louise? A
lawyer?”
“Nome, I hadn’t thought about it . . .” I answered, grateful that Miss Stephanie
was kind enough to change the subject. Hurriedly I began choosing my vocation.
Nurse? Aviator? “Well . . .”
“Why shoot, I thought you wanted to be a lawyer, you’ve already commenced
going to court.”
The ladies laughed again. “That Stephanie’s a card,” somebody said. Miss
Stephanie was encouraged to pursue the subject: “Don’t you want to grow up to
be a lawyer?”
Miss Maudie’s hand touched mine and I answered mildly enough, “Nome,
just a lady.”
Miss Stephanie eyed me suspiciously, decided that I meant no impertinence,
and contented herself with, “Well, you won’t get very far until you start wearing
dresses more often.”
Miss Maudie’s hand closed tightly on mine, and I said nothing. Its warmth
was enough.
Mrs. Grace Merriweather sat on my left, and I felt it would be polite to talk to
her. Mr. Merriweather, a faithful Methodist under duress, apparently saw
nothing personal in singing, “Amazing Grace, how sweet the sound, that saved a
wretch like me . . .” It was the general opinion of Maycomb, however, that Mrs.
Merriweather had sobered him up and made a reasonably useful citizen of him.
For certainly Mrs. Merriweather was the most devout lady in Maycomb. I
searched for a topic of interest to her. “What did you all study this afternoon?” I
asked.
“Oh child, those poor Mrunas,” she said, and was off. Few other questions
would be necessary.
Mrs. Merriweather’s large brown eyes always filled with tears when she
considered the oppressed. “Living in that jungle with nobody but J. Grimes
Everett,” she said. “Not a white person’ll go near ‘em but that saintly J. Grimes
Everett.”
Mrs. Merriweather played her voice like an organ; every word she said
received its full measure: “The poverty . . . the darkness . . . the immorality—
nobody but J. Grimes Everett knows. You know, when the church gave me that
trip to the camp grounds J. Grimes Everett said to me—”
“Was he there, ma’am? I thought—”
“Home on leave. J. Grimes Everett said to me, he said, ‘Mrs. Merriweather,
you have no conception, no conception of what we are fighting over there.’
That’s what he said to me.”
“Yes ma’am.”
“I said to him, ‘Mr. Everett,’ I said, ‘the ladies of the Maycomb Alabama
Methodist Episcopal Church South are behind you one hundred percent.’ That’s
what I said to him. And you know, right then and there I made a pledge in my
heart. I said to myself, when I go home I’m going to give a course on the Mrunas
and bring J. Grimes Everett’s message to Maycomb and that’s just what I’m
doing.”
“Yes ma’am.”
When Mrs. Merriweather shook her head, her black curls jiggled. “Jean
Louise,” she said, “you are a fortunate girl. You live in a Christian home with
Christian folks in a Christian town. Out there in J. Grimes Everett’s land there’s
nothing but sin and squalor.”
“Yes ma’am.”
“Sin and squalor—what was that, Gertrude?” Mrs. Merriweather turned on her
chimes for the lady sitting beside her. “Oh that. Well, I always say forgive and
forget, forgive and forget. Thing that church ought to do is help her lead a
Christian life for those children from here on out. Some of the men ought to go
out there and tell that preacher to encourage her.”
“Excuse me, Mrs. Merriweather,” I interrupted, “are you all talking about
Mayella Ewell?”
“May—? No, child. That darky’s wife. Tom’s wife, Tom—”
“Robinson, ma’am.”
Mrs. Merriweather turned back to her neighbor. “There’s one thing I truly
believe, Gertrude,” she continued, “but some people just don’t see it my way. If
we just let them know we forgive ‘em, that we’ve forgotten it, then this whole
thing’ll blow over.”
“Ah—Mrs. Merriweather,” I interrupted once more, “what’ll blow over?”
Again, she turned to me. Mrs. Merriweather was one of those childless adults
who find it necessary to assume a different tone of voice when speaking to
children. “Nothing, Jean Louise,” she said, in stately largo, “the cooks and field
hands are just dissatisfied, but they’re settling down now—they grumbled all
next day after that trial.”
Mrs. Merriweather faced Mrs. Farrow: “Gertrude, I tell you there’s nothing
more distracting than a sulky darky. Their mouths go down to here. Just ruins
your day to have one of ‘em in the kitchen. You know what I said to my Sophy,
Gertrude? I said, ’Sophy,‘ I said, ’you simply are not being a Christian today.
Jesus Christ never went around grumbling and complaining,‘ and you know, it
did her good. She took her eyes off that floor and said, ’Nome, Miz
Merriweather, Jesus never went around grumblin‘.’ I tell you, Gertrude, you
never ought to let an opportunity go by to witness for the Lord.”
I was reminded of the ancient little organ in the chapel at Finch’s Landing.
When I was very small, and if I had been very good during the day, Atticus
would let me pump its bellows while he picked out a tune with one finger. The
last note would linger as long as there was air to sustain it. Mrs. Merriweather
had run out of air, I judged, and was replenishing her supply while Mrs. Farrow
composed herself to speak.
Mrs. Farrow was a splendidly built woman with pale eyes and narrow feet.
She had a fresh permanent wave, and her hair was a mass of tight gray ringlets.
She was the second most devout lady in Maycomb. She had a curious habit of
prefacing everything she said with a soft sibilant sound.
“S-s-s Grace,” she said, “it’s just like I was telling Brother Hutson the other
day. ‘S-s-s Brother Hutson,’ I said, ‘looks like we’re fighting a losing battle, a
losing battle.’ I said, ‘S-s-s it doesn’t matter to ’em one bit. We can educate ‘em
till we’re blue in the face, we can try till we drop to make Christians out of ’em,
but there’s no lady safe in her bed these nights.‘ He said to me, ’Mrs. Farrow, I
don’t know what we’re coming to down here.‘ S-s-s I told him that was certainly
a fact.”
Mrs. Merriweather nodded wisely. Her voice soared over the clink of coffee
cups and the soft bovine sounds of the ladies munching their dainties.
“Gertrude,” she said, “I tell you there are some good but misguided people in
this town. Good, but misguided. Folks in this town who think they’re doing
right, I mean. Now far be it from me to say who, but some of ‘em in this town
thought they were doing the right thing a while back, but all they did was stir
’em up. That’s all they did. Might’ve looked like the right thing to do at the time,
I’m sure I don’t know, I’m not read in that field, but sulky . . . dissatisfied . . . I
tell you if my Sophy’d kept it up another day I’d have let her go. It’s never
entered that wool of hers that the only reason I keep her is because this
depression’s on and she needs her dollar and a quarter every week she can get
it.”
“His food doesn’t stick going down, does it?”
Miss Maudie said it. Two tight lines had appeared at the corners of her mouth.
She had been sitting silently beside me, her coffee cup balanced on one knee. I
had lost the thread of conversation long ago, when they quit talking about Tom
Robinson’s wife, and had contented myself with thinking of Finch’s Landing
and the river. Aunt Alexandra had got it backwards: the business part of the
meeting was blood-curdling, the social hour was dreary.
“Maudie, I’m sure I don’t know what you mean,” said Mrs. Merriweather.
“I’m sure you do,” Miss Maudie said shortly.
She said no more. When Miss Maudie was angry her brevity was icy.
Something had made her deeply angry, and her gray eyes were as cold as her
voice. Mrs. Merriweather reddened, glanced at me, and looked away. I could not
see Mrs. Farrow.
Aunt Alexandra got up from the table and swiftly passed more refreshments,
neatly engaging Mrs. Merriweather and Mrs. Gates in brisk conversation. When
she had them well on the road with Mrs. Perkins, Aunt Alexandra stepped back.
She gave Miss Maudie a look of pure gratitude, and I wondered at the world of
women. Miss Maudie and Aunt Alexandra had never been especially close, and
here was Aunty silently thanking her for something. For what, I knew not. I was
content to learn that Aunt Alexandra could be pierced sufficiently to feel
gratitude for help given. There was no doubt about it, I must soon enter this
world, where on its surface fragrant ladies rocked slowly, fanned gently, and
drank cool water.
But I was more at home in my father’s world. People like Mr. Heck Tate did
not trap you with innocent questions to make fun of you; even Jem was not
highly critical unless you said something stupid. Ladies seemed to live in faint
horror of men, seemed unwilling to approve wholeheartedly of them. But I liked
them. There was something about them, no matter how much they cussed and
drank and gambled and chewed; no matter how undelectable they were, there
was something about them that I instinctively liked . . . they weren’t—
“Hypocrites, Mrs. Perkins, born hypocrites,” Mrs. Merriweather was saying.
“At least we don’t have that sin on our shoulders down here. People up there set
‘em free, but you don’t see ’em settin‘ at the table with ’em. At least we don’t
have the deceit to say to ‘em yes you’re as good as we are but stay away from
us. Down here we just say you live your way and we’ll live ours. I think that
woman, that Mrs. Roosevelt’s lost her mind—just plain lost her mind coming
down to Birmingham and tryin’ to sit with ‘em. If I was the Mayor of
Birmingham I’d—”
Well, neither of us was the Mayor of Birmingham, but I wished I was the
Governor of Alabama for one day: I’d let Tom Robinson go so quick the
Missionary Society wouldn’t have time to catch its breath. Calpurnia was telling
Miss Rachel’s cook the other day how bad Tom was taking things and she didn’t
stop talking when I came into the kitchen. She said there wasn’t a thing Atticus
could do to make being shut up easier for him, that the last thing he said to
Atticus before they took him down to the prison camp was, “Good-bye, Mr.
Finch, there ain’t nothin‘ you can do now, so there ain’t no use tryin’.”
Calpurnia said Atticus told her that the day they took Tom to prison he just gave
up hope. She said Atticus tried to explain things to him, and that he must do his
best not to lose hope because Atticus was doing his best to get him free. Miss
Rachel’s cook asked Calpurnia why didn’t Atticus just say yes, you’ll go free,
and leave it at that—seemed like that’d be a big comfort to Tom. Calpurnia said,
“Because you ain’t familiar with the law. First thing you learn when you’re in a
lawin‘ family is that there ain’t any definite answers to anything. Mr. Finch
couldn’t say somethin’s so when he doesn’t know for sure it’s so.”
The front door slammed and I heard Atticus’s footsteps in the hall.
Automatically I wondered what time it was. Not nearly time for him to be home,
and on Missionary Society days he usually stayed downtown until black dark.
He stopped in the doorway. His hat was in his hand, and his face was white.
“Excuse me, ladies,” he said. “Go right ahead with your meeting, don’t let me
disturb you. Alexandra, could you come to the kitchen a minute? I want to
borrow Calpurnia for a while.”
He didn’t go through the diningroom, but went down the back hallway and
entered the kitchen from the rear door. Aunt Alexandra and I met him. The
diningroom door opened again and Miss Maudie joined us. Calpurnia had half
risen from her chair.
“Cal,” Atticus said, “I want you to go with me out to Helen Robinson’s house
—”
“What’s the matter?” Aunt Alexandra asked, alarmed by the look on my
father’s face.
“Tom’s dead.”
Aunt Alexandra put her hands to her mouth.
“They shot him,” said Atticus. “He was running. It was during their exercise
period. They said he just broke into a blind raving charge at the fence and started
climbing over. Right in front of them—”
“Didn’t they try to stop him? Didn’t they give him any warning?” Aunt
Alexandra’s voice shook.
“Oh yes, the guards called to him to stop. They fired a few shots in the air,
then to kill. They got him just as he went over the fence. They said if he’d had
two good arms he’d have made it, he was moving that fast. Seventeen bullet
holes in him. They didn’t have to shoot him that much. Cal, I want you to come
out with me and help me tell Helen.”
“Yes sir,” she murmured, fumbling at her apron. Miss Maudie went to
Calpurnia and untied it.
“This is the last straw, Atticus,” Aunt Alexandra said.
“Depends on how you look at it,” he said. “What was one Negro, more or less,
among two hundred of ‘em? He wasn’t Tom to them, he was an escaping
prisoner.”
Atticus leaned against the refrigerator, pushed up his glasses, and rubbed his
eyes. “We had such a good chance,” he said. “I told him what I thought, but I
couldn’t in truth say that we had more than a good chance. I guess Tom was
tired of white men’s chances and preferred to take his own. Ready, Cal?”
“Yessir, Mr. Finch.”
“Then let’s go.”
Aunt Alexandra sat down in Calpurnia’s chair and put her hands to her face.
She sat quite still; she was so quiet I wondered if she would faint. I heard Miss
Maudie breathing as if she had just climbed the steps, and in the diningroom the
ladies chattered happily.
I thought Aunt Alexandra was crying, but when she took her hands away from
her face, she was not. She looked weary. She spoke, and her voice was flat.
“I can’t say I approve of everything he does, Maudie, but he’s my brother, and
I just want to know when this will ever end.” Her voice rose: “It tears him to
pieces. He doesn’t show it much, but it tears him to pieces. I’ve seen him when
—what else do they want from him, Maudie, what else?”
“What does who want, Alexandra?” Miss Maudie asked.
“I mean this town. They’re perfectly willing to let him do what they’re too
afraid to do themselves—it might lose ‘em a nickel. They’re perfectly willing to
let him wreck his health doing what they’re afraid to do, they’re—”
“Be quiet, they’ll hear you,” said Miss Maudie. “Have you ever thought of it
this way, Alexandra? Whether Maycomb knows it or not, we’re paying the
highest tribute we can pay a man. We trust him to do right. It’s that simple.”
“Who?” Aunt Alexandra never knew she was echoing her twelve-year-old
nephew.
“The handful of people in this town who say that fair play is not marked
White Only; the handful of people who say a fair trial is for everybody, not just
us; the handful of people with enough humility to think, when they look at a
Negro, there but for the Lord’s kindness am l.” Miss Maudie’s old crispness was
returning: “The handful of people in this town with background, that’s who they
are.”
Had I been attentive, I would have had another scrap to add to Jem’s
definition of background, but I found myself shaking and couldn’t stop. I had
seen Enfield Prison Farm, and Atticus had pointed out the exercise yard to me. It
was the size of a football field.
“Stop that shaking,” commanded Miss Maudie, and I stopped. “Get up,
Alexandra, we’ve left ‘em long enough.”
Aunt Alexandra rose and smoothed the various whalebone ridges along her
hips. She took her handkerchief from her belt and wiped her nose. She patted her
hair and said, “Do I show it?”
“Not a sign,” said Miss Maudie. “Are you together again, Jean Louise?”
“Yes ma’am.”
“Then let’s join the ladies,” she said grimly.
Their voices swelled when Miss Maudie opened the door to the diningroom.
Aunt Alexandra was ahead of me, and I saw her head go up as she went through
the door.
“Oh, Mrs. Perkins,” she said, “you need some more coffee. Let me get it.”
“Calpurnia’s on an errand for a few minutes, Grace,” said Miss Maudie. “Let
me pass you some more of those dewberry tarts. ‘dyou hear what that cousin of
mine did the other day, the one who likes to go fishing? . . .”
And so they went, down the row of laughing women, around the diningroom,
refilling coffee cups, dishing out goodies as though their only regret was the
temporary domestic disaster of losing Calpurnia. The gentle hum began again.
“Yes sir, Mrs. Perkins, that J. Grimes Everett is a martyred saint, he . . . needed
to get married so they ran . . . to the beauty parlor every Saturday afternoon . . .
soon as the sun goes down. He goes to bed with the . . . chickens, a crate full of
sick chickens, Fred says that’s what started it all. Fred says . . .”
Aunt Alexandra looked across the room at me and smiled. She looked at a tray
of cookies on the table and nodded at them. I carefully picked up the tray and
watched myself walk to Mrs. Merriweather. With my best company manners, I
asked her if she would have some.
After all, if Aunty could be a lady at a time like this, so could I.
25
“D
on’t do that, Scout. Set him out on the back steps.”
“Jem, are you crazy? . . .”
“I said set him out on the back steps.”
Sighing, I scooped up the small creature, placed him on the bottom step and
went back to my cot. September had come, but not a trace of cool weather with
it, and we were still sleeping on the back screen porch. Lightning bugs were still
about, the night crawlers and flying insects that beat against the screen the
summer long had not gone wherever they go when autumn comes.
A roly-poly had found his way inside the house; I reasoned that the tiny
varmint had crawled up the steps and under the door. I was putting my book on
the floor beside my cot when I saw him. The creatures are no more than an inch
long, and when you touch them they roll themselves into a tight gray ball.
I lay on my stomach, reached down and poked him. He rolled up. Then,
feeling safe, I suppose, he slowly unrolled. He traveled a few inches on his
hundred legs and I touched him again. He rolled up. Feeling sleepy, I decided to
end things. My hand was going down on him when Jem spoke.
Jem was scowling. It was probably a part of the stage he was going through,
and I wished he would hurry up and get through it. He was certainly never cruel
to animals, but I had never known his charity to embrace the insect world.
“Why couldn’t I mash him?” I asked.
“Because they don’t bother you,” Jem answered in the darkness. He had
turned out his reading light.
“Reckon you’re at the stage now where you don’t kill flies and mosquitoes
now, I reckon,” I said. “Lemme know when you change your mind. Tell you one
thing, though, I ain’t gonna sit around and not scratch a redbug.”
“Aw dry up,” he answered drowsily.
Jem was the one who was getting more like a girl every day, not I.
Comfortable, I lay on my back and waited for sleep, and while waiting I thought
of Dill. He had left us the first of the month with firm assurances that he would
return the minute school was out—he guessed his folks had got the general idea
that he liked to spend his summers in Maycomb. Miss Rachel took us with them
in the taxi to Maycomb Junction, and Dill waved to us from the train window
until he was out of sight. He was not out of mind: I missed him. The last two
days of his time with us, Jem had taught him to swim—
Taught him to swim. I was wide awake, remembering what Dill had told me.
Barker’s Eddy is at the end of a dirt road off the Meridian highway about a
mile from town. It is easy to catch a ride down the highway on a cotton wagon or
from a passing motorist, and the short walk to the creek is easy, but the prospect
of walking all the way back home at dusk, when the traffic is light, is tiresome,
and swimmers are careful not to stay too late.
According to Dill, he and Jem had just come to the highway when they saw
Atticus driving toward them. He looked like he had not seen them, so they both
waved. Atticus finally slowed down; when they caught up with him he said,
“You’d better catch a ride back. I won’t be going home for a while.” Calpurnia
was in the back seat. Jem protested, then pleaded, and Atticus said, “All right,
you can come with us if you stay in the car.”
On the way to Tom Robinson’s, Atticus told them what had happened.
They turned off the highway, rode slowly by the dump and past the Ewell
residence, down the narrow lane to the Negro cabins. Dill said a crowd of black
children were playing marbles in Tom’s front yard. Atticus parked the car and
got out. Calpurnia followed him through the front gate.
Dill heard him ask one of the children, “Where’s your mother, Sam?” and
heard Sam say, “She down at Sis Stevens’s, Mr. Finch. Want me run fetch her?”
Dill said Atticus looked uncertain, then he said yes, and Sam scampered off.
“Go on with your game, boys,” Atticus said to the children.
A little girl came to the cabin door and stood looking at Atticus. Dill said her
hair was a wad of tiny stiff pigtails, each ending in a bright bow. She grinned
from ear to ear and walked toward our father, but she was too small to navigate
the steps. Dill said Atticus went to her, took off his hat, and offered her his
finger. She grabbed it and he eased her down the steps. Then he gave her to
Calpurnia.
Sam was trotting behind his mother when they came up. Dill said Helen said,
“‘evenin’, Mr. Finch, won’t you have a seat?” But she didn’t say any more.
Neither did Atticus.
“Scout,” said Dill, “she just fell down in the dirt. Just fell down in the dirt, like
a giant with a big foot just came along and stepped on her. Just ump—” Dill’s fat
foot hit the ground. “Like you’d step on an ant.”
Dill said Calpurnia and Atticus lifted Helen to her feet and half carried, half
walked her to the cabin. They stayed inside a long time, and Atticus came out
alone. When they drove back by the dump, some of the Ewells hollered at them,
but Dill didn’t catch what they said.
Maycomb was interested by the news of Tom’s death for perhaps two days;
two days was enough for the information to spread through the county. “Did you
hear about? . . . No? Well, they say he was runnin‘ fit to beat lightnin’ . . .” To
Maycomb, Tom’s death was typical. Typical of a nigger to cut and run. Typical
of a nigger’s mentality to have no plan, no thought for the future, just run blind
first chance he saw. Funny thing, Atticus Finch might’ve got him off scot free,
but wait—? Hell no. You know how they are. Easy come, easy go. Just shows
you, that Robinson boy was legally married, they say he kept himself clean, went
to church and all that, but when it comes down to the line the veneer’s mighty
thin. Nigger always comes out in ‘em.
A few more details, enabling the listener to repeat his version in turn, then
nothing to talk about until The Maycomb Tribune appeared the following
Thursday. There was a brief obituary in the Colored News, but there was also an
editorial.
Mr. B. B. Underwood was at his most bitter, and he couldn’t have cared less
who canceled advertising and subscriptions. (But Maycomb didn’t play that
way: Mr. Underwood could holler till he sweated and write whatever he wanted
to, he’d still get his advertising and subscriptions. If he wanted to make a fool of
himself in his paper that was his business.) Mr. Underwood didn’t talk about
miscarriages of justice, he was writing so children could understand. Mr.
Underwood simply figured it was a sin to kill cripples, be they standing, sitting,
or escaping. He likened Tom’s death to the senseless slaughter of songbirds by
hunters and children, and Maycomb thought he was trying to write an editorial
poetical enough to be reprinted in The Montgomery Advertiser.
How could this be so, I wondered, as I read Mr. Underwood’s editorial.
Senseless killing—Tom had been given due process of law to the day of his
death; he had been tried openly and convicted by twelve good men and true; my
father had fought for him all the way. Then Mr. Underwood’s meaning became
clear: Atticus had used every tool available to free men to save Tom Robinson,
but in the secret courts of men’s hearts Atticus had no case. Tom was a dead
man the minute Mayella Ewell opened her mouth and screamed.
The name Ewell gave me a queasy feeling. Maycomb had lost no time in
getting Mr. Ewell’s views on Tom’s demise and passing them along through that
English Channel of gossip, Miss Stephanie Crawford. Miss Stephanie told Aunt
Alexandra in Jem’s presence (“Oh foot, he’s old enough to listen.”) that Mr.
Ewell said it made one down and about two more to go. Jem told me not to be
afraid, Mr. Ewell was more hot gas than anything. Jem also told me that if I
breathed a word to Atticus, if in any way I let Atticus know I knew, Jem would
personally never speak to me again.
26
S
chool started, and so did our daily trips past the Radley Place. Jem was in the
seventh grade and went to high school, beyond the grammar-school building; I
was now in the third grade, and our routines were so different I only walked to
school with Jem in the mornings and saw him at mealtimes. He went out for
football, but was too slender and too young yet to do anything but carry the team
water buckets. This he did with enthusiasm; most afternoons he was seldom
home before dark.
The Radley Place had ceased to terrify me, but it was no less gloomy, no less
chilly under its great oaks, and no less uninviting. Mr. Nathan Radley could still
be seen on a clear day, walking to and from town; we knew Boo was there, for
the same old reason—nobody’d seen him carried out yet. I sometimes felt a
twinge of remorse, when passing by the old place, at ever having taken part in
what must have been sheer torment to Arthur Radley—what reasonable recluse
wants children peeping through his shutters, delivering greetings on the end of a
fishing-pole, wandering in his collards at night? And yet I remembered. Two
Indian-head pennies, chewing gum, soap dolls, a rusty medal, a broken watch
and chain. Jem must have put them away somewhere. I stopped and looked at
the tree one afternoon: the trunk was swelling around its cement patch. The
patch itself was turning yellow.
We had almost seen him a couple of times, a good enough score for anybody.
But I still looked for him each time I went by. Maybe someday we would see
him. I imagined how it would be: when it happened, he’d just be sitting in the
swing when I came along. “Hidy do, Mr. Arthur,” I would say, as if I had said it
every afternoon of my life. “Evening, Jean Louise,” he would say, as if he had
said it every afternoon of my life, “right pretty spell we’re having, isn’t it?” “Yes
sir, right pretty,” I would say, and go on.
It was only a fantasy. We would never see him. He probably did go out when
the moon was down and gaze upon Miss Stephanie Crawford. I’d have picked
somebody else to look at, but that was his business. He would never gaze at us.
“You aren’t starting that again, are you?” said Atticus one night, when I
expressed a stray desire just to have one good look at Boo Radley before I died.
“If you are, I’ll tell you right now: stop it. I’m too old to go chasing you off the
Radley property. Besides, it’s dangerous. You might get shot. You know Mr.
Nathan shoots at every shadow he sees, even shadows that leave size-four bare
footprints. You were lucky not to be killed.”
I hushed then and there. At the same time I marveled at Atticus. This was the
first he had let us know he knew a lot more about something than we thought he
knew. And it had happened years ago. No, only last summer—no, summer
before last, when . . . time was playing tricks on me. I must remember to ask
Jem.
So many things had happened to us, Boo Radley was the least of our fears.
Atticus said he didn’t see how anything else could happen, that things had a way
of settling down, and after enough time passed people would forget that Tom
Robinson’s existence was ever brought to their attention.
Perhaps Atticus was right, but the events of the summer hung over us like
smoke in a closed room. The adults in Maycomb never discussed the case with
Jem and me; it seemed that they discussed it with their children, and their
attitude must have been that neither of us could help having Atticus for a parent,
so their children must be nice to us in spite of him. The children would never
have thought that up for themselves: had our classmates been left to their own
devices, Jem and I would have had several swift, satisfying fist-fights apiece and
ended the matter for good. As it was, we were compelled to hold our heads high
and be, respectively, a gentleman and a lady. In a way, it was like the era of Mrs.
Henry Lafayette Dubose, without all her yelling. There was one odd thing,
though, that I never understood: in spite of Atticus’s shortcomings as a parent,
people were content to re-elect him to the state legislature that year, as usual,
without opposition. I came to the conclusion that people were just peculiar, I
withdrew from them, and never thought about them until I was forced to.
I was forced to one day in school. Once a week, we had a Current Events
period. Each child was supposed to clip an item from a newspaper, absorb its
contents, and reveal them to the class. This practice allegedly overcame a variety
of evils: standing in front of his fellows encouraged good posture and gave a
child poise; delivering a short talk made him word-conscious; learning his
current event strengthened his memory; being singled out made him more than
ever anxious to return to the Group.
The idea was profound, but as usual, in Maycomb it didn’t work very well. In
the first place, few rural children had access to newspapers, so the burden of
Current Events was borne by the town children, convincing the bus children
more deeply that the town children got all the attention anyway. The rural
children who could, usually brought clippings from what they called The Grit
Paper, a publication spurious in the eyes of Miss Gates, our teacher. Why she
frowned when a child recited from The Grit Paper I never knew, but in some
way it was associated with liking fiddling, eating syrupy biscuits for lunch, being
a holy-roller, singing Sweetly Sings the Donkey and pronouncing it dunkey, all
of which the state paid teachers to discourage.
Even so, not many of the children knew what a Current Event was. Little
Chuck Little, a hundred years old in his knowledge of cows and their habits, was
halfway through an Uncle Natchell story when Miss Gates stopped him:
“Charles, that is not a current event. That is an advertisement.”
Cecil Jacobs knew what one was, though. When his turn came, he went to the
front of the room and began, “Old Hitler—”
“Adolf Hitler, Cecil,” said Miss Gates. “One never begins with Old anybody.”
“Yes ma’am,” he said. “Old Adolf Hitler has been prosecutin‘ the—”
“Persecuting Cecil . . .”
“Nome, Miss Gates, it says here—well anyway, old Adolf Hitler has been
after the Jews and he’s puttin‘ ’em in prisons and he’s taking away all their
property and he won’t let any of ‘em out of the country and he’s washin’ all the
feeble-minded and—”
“Washing the feeble-minded?”
“Yes ma’am, Miss Gates, I reckon they don’t have sense enough to wash
themselves, I don’t reckon an idiot could keep hisself clean. Well anyway,
Hitler’s started a program to round up all the half-Jews too and he wants to
register ‘em in case they might wanta cause him any trouble and I think this is a
bad thing and that’s my current event.”
“Very good, Cecil,” said Miss Gates. Puffing, Cecil returned to his seat.
A hand went up in the back of the room. “How can he do that?”
“Who do what?” asked Miss Gates patiently.
“I mean how can Hitler just put a lot of folks in a pen like that, looks like the
govamint’d stop him,” said the owner of the hand.
“Hitler is the government,” said Miss Gates, and seizing an opportunity to
make education dynamic, she went to the blackboard. She printed
DEMOCRACY in large letters. “Democracy,” she said. “Does anybody have a
definition?”
“Us,” somebody said.
I raised my hand, remembering an old campaign slogan Atticus had once told
me about.
“What do you think it means, Jean Louise?”
“‘Equal rights for all, special privileges for none,’” I quoted.
“Very good, Jean Louise, very good,” Miss Gates smiled. In front of
DEMOCRACY, she printed WE ARE A. “Now class, say it all together, ‘We
are a democracy.’”
We said it. Then Miss Gates said, “That’s the difference between America and
Germany. We are a democracy and Germany is a dictatorship. Dictatorship,” she
said. “Over here we don’t believe in persecuting anybody. Persecution comes
from people who are prejudiced. Prejudice,” she enunciated carefully. “There are
no better people in the world than the Jews, and why Hitler doesn’t think so is a
mystery to me.”
An inquiring soul in the middle of the room said, “Why don’t they like the
Jews, you reckon, Miss Gates?”
“I don’t know, Henry. They contribute to every society they live in, and most
of all, they are a deeply religious people. Hitler’s trying to do away with
religion, so maybe he doesn’t like them for that reason.”
Cecil spoke up. “Well I don’t know for certain,” he said, “they’re supposed to
change money or somethin‘, but that ain’t no cause to persecute ’em. They’re
white, ain’t they?”
Miss Gates said, “When you get to high school, Cecil, you’ll learn that the
Jews have been persecuted since the beginning of history, even driven out of
their own country. It’s one of the most terrible stories in history. Time for
arithmetic, children.”
As I had never liked arithmetic, I spent the period looking out the window.
The only time I ever saw Atticus scowl was when Elmer Davis would give us
the latest on Hitler. Atticus would snap off the radio and say, “Hmp!” I asked
him once why he was impatient with Hitler and Atticus said, “Because he’s a
maniac.”
This would not do, I mused, as the class proceeded with its sums. One maniac
and millions of German folks. Looked to me like they’d shut Hitler in a pen
instead of letting him shut them up. There was something else wrong—I would
ask my father about it.
I did, and he said he could not possibly answer my question because he didn’t
know the answer.
“But it’s okay to hate Hitler?”
“It is not,” he said. “It’s not okay to hate anybody.”
“Atticus,” I said, “there’s somethin‘ I don’t understand. Miss Gates said it was
awful, Hitler doin’ like he does, she got real red in the face about it—”
“I should think she would.”
“But—”
“Yes?”
“Nothing, sir.” I went away, not sure that I could explain to Atticus what was
on my mind, not sure that I could clarify what was only a feeling. Perhaps Jem
could provide the answer. Jem understood school things better than Atticus.
Jem was worn out from a day’s water-carrying. There were at least twelve
banana peels on the floor by his bed, surrounding an empty milk bottle.
“Whatcha stuffin‘ for?” I asked.
“Coach says if I can gain twenty-five pounds by year after next I can play,” he
said. “This is the quickest way.”
“If you don’t throw it all up. Jem,” I said, “I wanta ask you somethin‘.”
“Shoot.” He put down his book and stretched his legs.
“Miss Gates is a nice lady, ain’t she?”
“Why sure,” said Jem. “I liked her when I was in her room.”
“She hates Hitler a lot . . .”
“What’s wrong with that?”
“Well, she went on today about how bad it was him treatin‘ the Jews like that.
Jem, it’s not right to persecute anybody, is it? I mean have mean thoughts about
anybody, even, is it?”
“Gracious no, Scout. What’s eatin‘ you?”
“Well, coming out of the courthouse that night Miss Gates was—she was
goin‘ down the steps in front of us, you musta not seen her—she was talking
with Miss Stephanie Crawford. I heard her say it’s time somebody taught ’em a
lesson, they were gettin‘ way above themselves, an’ the next thing they think
they can do is marry us. Jem, how can you hate Hitler so bad an‘ then turn
around and be ugly about folks right at home—”
Jem was suddenly furious. He leaped off the bed, grabbed me by the collar
and shook me. “I never wanta hear about that courthouse again, ever, ever, you
hear me? You hear me? Don’t you ever say one word to me about it again, you
hear? Now go on!”
I was too surprised to cry. I crept from Jem’s room and shut the door softly,
lest undue noise set him off again. Suddenly tired, I wanted Atticus. He was in
the livingroom, and I went to him and tried to get in his lap.
Atticus smiled. “You’re getting so big now, I’ll just have to hold a part of
you.” He held me close. “Scout,” he said softly, “don’t let Jem get you down.
He’s having a rough time these days. I heard you back there.”
Atticus said that Jem was trying hard to forget something, but what he was
really doing was storing it away for a while, until enough time passed. Then he
would be able to think about it and sort things out. When he was able to think
about it, Jem would be himself again.
27
T
hings did settle down, after a fashion, as Atticus said they would. By the
middle of October, only two small things out of the ordinary happened to two
Maycomb citizens. No, there were three things, and they did not directly concern
us—the Finches—but in a way they did.
The first thing was that Mr. Bob Ewell acquired and lost a job in a matter of
days and probably made himself unique in the annals of the nineteen-thirties: he
was the only man I ever heard of who was fired from the WPA for laziness. I
suppose his brief burst of fame brought on a briefer burst of industry, but his job
lasted only as long as his notoriety: Mr. Ewell found himself as forgotten as Tom
Robinson. Thereafter, he resumed his regular weekly appearances at the welfare
office for his check, and received it with no grace amid obscure mutterings that
the bastards who thought they ran this town wouldn’t permit an honest man to
make a living. Ruth Jones, the welfare lady, said Mr. Ewell openly accused
Atticus of getting his job. She was upset enough to walk down to Atticus’s office
and tell him about it. Atticus told Miss Ruth not to fret, that if Bob Ewell wanted
to discuss Atticus’s “getting” his job, he knew the way to the office.
The second thing happened to Judge Taylor. Judge Taylor was not a Sunday-
night churchgoer: Mrs. Taylor was. Judge Taylor savored his Sunday night hour
alone in his big house, and churchtime found him holed up in his study reading
the writings of Bob Taylor (no kin, but the judge would have been proud to
claim it). One Sunday night, lost in fruity metaphors and florid diction, Judge
Taylor’s attention was wrenched from the page by an irritating scratching noise.
“Hush,” he said to Ann Taylor, his fat nondescript dog. Then he realized he was
speaking to an empty room; the scratching noise was coming from the rear of the
house. Judge Taylor clumped to the back porch to let Ann out and found the
screen door swinging open. A shadow on the corner of the house caught his eye,
and that was all he saw of his visitor. Mrs. Taylor came home from church to
find her husband in his chair, lost in the writings of Bob Taylor, with a shotgun
across his lap.
The third thing happened to Helen Robinson, Tom’s widow. If Mr. Ewell was
as forgotten as Tom Robinson, Tom Robinson was as forgotten as Boo Radley.
But Tom was not forgotten by his employer, Mr. Link Deas. Mr. Link Deas
made a job for Helen. He didn’t really need her, but he said he felt right bad
about the way things turned out. I never knew who took care of her children
while Helen was away. Calpurnia said it was hard on Helen, because she had to
walk nearly a mile out of her way to avoid the Ewells, who, according to Helen,
“chunked at her” the first time she tried to use the public road. Mr. Link Deas
eventually received the impression that Helen was coming to work each morning
from the wrong direction, and dragged the reason out of her. “Just let it be, Mr.
Link, please suh,” Helen begged. “The hell I will,” said Mr. Link. He told her to
come by his store that afternoon before she left. She did, and Mr. Link closed his
store, put his hat firmly on his head, and walked Helen home. He walked her the
short way, by the Ewells‘. On his way back, Mr. Link stopped at the crazy gate.
“Ewell?” he called. “I say Ewell!”
The windows, normally packed with children, were empty.
“I know every last one of you’s in there a-layin‘ on the floor! Now hear me,
Bob Ewell: if I hear one more peep outa my girl Helen about not bein’ able to
walk this road I’ll have you in jail before sundown!” Mr. Link spat in the dust
and walked home.
Helen went to work next morning and used the public road. Nobody chunked
at her, but when she was a few yards beyond the Ewell house, she looked around
and saw Mr. Ewell walking behind her. She turned and walked on, and Mr.
Ewell kept the same distance behind her until she reached Mr. Link Deas’s
house. All the way to the house, Helen said, she heard a soft voice behind her,
crooning foul words. Thoroughly frightened, she telephoned Mr. Link at his
store, which was not too far from his house. As Mr. Link came out of his store
he saw Mr. Ewell leaning on the fence. Mr. Ewell said, “Don’t you look at me,
Link Deas, like I was dirt. I ain’t jumped your—”
“First thing you can do, Ewell, is get your stinkin‘ carcass off my property.
You’re leanin’ on it an‘ I can’t afford fresh paint for it. Second thing you can do
is stay away from my cook or I’ll have you up for assault—”
“I ain’t touched her, Link Deas, and ain’t about to go with no nigger!”
“You don’t have to touch her, all you have to do is make her afraid, an‘ if
assault ain’t enough to keep you locked up awhile, I’ll get you in on the Ladies’
Law, so get outa my sight! If you don’t think I mean it, just bother that girl
again!”
Mr. Ewell evidently thought he meant it, for Helen reported no further trouble.
“I don’t like it, Atticus, I don’t like it at all,” was Aunt Alexandra’s
assessment of these events. “That man seems to have a permanent running
grudge against everybody connected with that case. I know how that kind are
about paying off grudges, but I don’t understand why he should harbor one—he
had his way in court, didn’t he?”
“I think I understand,” said Atticus. “It might be because he knows in his heart
that very few people in Maycomb really believed his and Mayella’s yarns. He
thought he’d be a hero, but all he got for his pain was . . . was, okay, we’ll
convict this Negro but get back to your dump. He’s had his fling with about
everybody now, so he ought to be satisfied. He’ll settle down when the weather
changes.”
“But why should he try to burgle John Taylor’s house? He obviously didn’t
know John was home or he wouldn’t‘ve tried. Only lights John shows on Sunday
nights are on the front porch and back in his den . . .”
“You don’t know if Bob Ewell cut that screen, you don’t know who did it,”
said Atticus. “But I can guess. I proved him a liar but John made him look like a
fool. All the time Ewell was on the stand I couldn’t dare look at John and keep a
straight face. John looked at him as if he were a three-legged chicken or a square
egg. Don’t tell me judges don’t try to prejudice juries,” Atticus chuckled.
By the end of October, our lives had become the familiar routine of school,
play, study. Jem seemed to have put out of his mind whatever it was he wanted
to forget, and our classmates mercifully let us forget our father’s eccentricities.
Cecil Jacobs asked me one time if Atticus was a Radical. When I asked Atticus,
Atticus was so amused I was rather annoyed, but he said he wasn’t laughing at
me. He said, “You tell Cecil I’m about as radical as Cotton Tom Heflin.”
Aunt Alexandra was thriving. Miss Maudie must have silenced the whole
missionary society at one blow, for Aunty again ruled that roost. Her
refreshments grew even more delicious. I learned more about the poor Mrunas’
social life from listening to Mrs. Merriweather: they had so little sense of family
that the whole tribe was one big family. A child had as many fathers as there
were men in the community, as many mothers as there were women. J. Grimes
Everett was doing his utmost to change this state of affairs, and desperately
needed our prayers.
Maycomb was itself again. Precisely the same as last year and the year before
that, with only two minor changes. Firstly, people had removed from their store
windows and automobiles the stickers that said NRA—WE DO OUR PART. I
asked Atticus why, and he said it was because the National Recovery Act was
dead. I asked who killed it: he said nine old men.
The second change in Maycomb since last year was not one of national
significance. Until then, Halloween in Maycomb was a completely unorganized
affair. Each child did what he wanted to do, with assistance from other children
if there was anything to be moved, such as placing a light buggy on top of the
livery stable. But parents thought things went too far last year, when the peace of
Miss Tutti and Miss Frutti was shattered.
Misses Tutti and Frutti Barber were maiden ladies, sisters, who lived together
in the only Maycomb residence boasting a cellar. The Barber ladies were
rumored to be Republicans, having migrated from Clanton, Alabama, in 1911.
Their ways were strange to us, and why they wanted a cellar nobody knew, but
they wanted one and they dug one, and they spent the rest of their lives chasing
generations of children out of it.
Misses Tutti and Frutti (their names were Sarah and Frances), aside from their
Yankee ways, were both deaf. Miss Tutti denied it and lived in a world of
silence, but Miss Frutti, not about to miss anything, employed an ear trumpet so
enormous that Jem declared it was a loudspeaker from one of those dog
Victrolas.
With these facts in mind and Halloween at hand, some wicked children had
waited until the Misses Barber were thoroughly asleep, slipped into their
livingroom (nobody but the Radleys locked up at night), stealthily made away
with every stick of furniture therein, and hid it in the cellar. I deny having taken
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