1. Bing!
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2. Maycomb was a tired old town
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3. even in 1932 when
I first knew it.
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4. Somehow, it was hotter then.
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5. Men's stiff collars wilted
by 9:00 in the morning.
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6. Ladies bathed before noon,
after their 3:00 naps
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7. and by nightfall
were like soft teacakes
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8. with frostings of sweat
and sweet talcum.
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9. A day was 24 hours long,
but it seemed longer.
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10. There was no hurry, for there
was nowhere to go and nothing to buy
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11. and no money to buy it with.
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12. Although Maycomb County
had recently been told
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13. that it had nothing to
fear but fear itself.
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14. That summer I was 6 years old.
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15. Good morning,
Mr. Cunningham.
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16. Good morning, miss.
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17. My daddy's getting dressed.
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18. Would you like me
to call him for you?
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19. No, miss,
I don't care to bother.
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20. Why, it's no bother,
Mr. Cunningham.
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21. He'll be happy to see you.
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22. Atticus.
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23. Atticus!
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24. Here's Mr. Cunningham.
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25. Good morning, Walter.
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26. Good morning,
Mr. Finch.
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27. I didn't want to
bother you none.
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28. I brought you these hickory nuts
as part of my entailment.
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29. Thank you.
The collards we had last week were delicious.
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30. Well, morning.
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31. Morning, Walter.
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32. Scout, I think maybe next time
Mr. Cunningham comes,
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33. you'd better not call me.
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34. I thought you'd
want to thank him.
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35. Oh, I do.
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36. But I think it embarrasses him
to be thanked.
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37. Why does he bring you
all this stuff?
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38. He is paying me for some legal work
I did for him.
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39. Why is he paying you like this?
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40. That's the only way he can.
He has no money.
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41. Is he poor?
Yes.
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42. Are we poor?
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43. We are, indeed.
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44. Are we as poor as
the Cunninghams?
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45. No, not exactly.
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46. The Cunninghams are country folks,
farmers.
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47. The Crash hit them the hardest.
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48. Scout, call your brother.
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49. Atticus,
Jem's up in the tree.
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50. He says he won't come
down until you agree
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51. to play football
for the Methodists.
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52. Jem?
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53. Son, why don't you come on down
out of there now
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54. and have your breakfast?
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55. Calpurnia has a good one.
Hot biscuits.
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56. No, sir.
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57. Not until you agree to play football
for the Methodists.
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58. Son, I can't do that.
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59. I explained to you,
I'm too old to get out there.
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60. After all,
I'm the only father you have.
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61. You wouldn't want me to go
and get my head knocked off, would you?
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62. I ain't coming down.
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63. Suit yourself.
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64. Morning.
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65. Good morning, Miss Maudie.
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66. What's going on over there?
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67. I'm having a terrible time,
Miss Maudie.
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68. Jem's staying up in the tree
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69. until Atticus agrees to play football for
the Methodists
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70. and Atticus says he's too old.
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71. Every time I want him to do something,
he's too old.
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72. He's too old for anything.
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73. He can do plenty of things.
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74. You be good, children.
Mind Cal.
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75. Good morning, Maudie.
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76. Good morning, Atticus.
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77. He won't let me have a gun
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78. and he'll only play touch football with me,
never tackle.
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79. He can make somebody's
will so airtight you can't break it.
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80. You count your blessings
and stop complaining, both of you.
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81. Thank your stars he has the sense
to act his age.
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82. Jem, he is pretty old.
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83. I can't help that.
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84. Hey.
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85. Hey, yourself.
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86. I'm Charles Baker Harris.
I can read.
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87. You got anything that needs reading,
I can do it.
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88. How old are you?
Four-and-a-half?
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89. Going on seven.
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90. No wonder, then.
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91. Scout's been reading
since she was born,
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92. and she don't start
school till next month.
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93. You look right puny
for going on seven.
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94. I'm little, but I'm old.
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95. Folks call me Dill.
I'm from Meridian, Mississippi
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96. and I'm spending two weeks next door
with my aunt Stephanie.
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97. My mama worked for a photographer
in Meridian.
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98. She entered my picture in
the Beautiful Child contest and won $5 on it.
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99. She gave the money to me
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100. and I went to the picture show
20 times with it.
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101. Our mama's dead but we've got a daddy.
Where's your daddy?
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102. I haven't got one.
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103. Is he dead?
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104. No.
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105. Well...
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106. Well, if he's not dead, you've got one,
haven't you?
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107. Hush, Scout.
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108. What did I do?
What did I do?
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109. Uh, Dill, this is Calpurnia.
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110. Pleased to know you, Dill.
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111. Pleased to know you.
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112. My daddy owns
the I and N Railroad.
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113. He's going to let me run the engine
all the way to New Orleans.
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114. Is that so?
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115. He says I can invite anybody...
Shh.
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116. There goes the meanest
man that ever took a breath of life.
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117. Why is he the meanest man?
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118. Well, for one thing,
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119. he has a boy named Boo
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120. that he keeps chained to a bed in
the house over yonder.
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121. Come on.
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122. See, he lives over there.
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123. Boo only comes out at night
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124. when you're asleep
and it's pitch dark.
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125. When you wake up at night,
you can hear him.
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126. Once I heard him scratching on
our screen door
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127. but he was gone by the time
Atticus got there.
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128. I wonder what he does in there.
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129. I wonder what he looks like.
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130. Well,
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131. judging from his tracks,
he's about 6'6" tall.
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132. He eats raw squirrels
and all the cats he can catch.
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133. There's a long, jagged scar
that runs all the way across his face.
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134. His teeth are yellow and rotten.
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135. His eyes are popped,
and he drools most of the time.
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136. Oh, I don't believe you.
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137. Dill, what are you doing here?
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138. My Lord, Aunt Stephanie!
You almost gave me a heart attack.
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139. Dill, I don't want you playing around
that house over there.
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140. There's a maniac lives there and
he's dangerous.
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141. See?
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142. I was just trying to warn him about Boo.
He wouldn't believe me.
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143. You'd just better believe him,
Mr. Dill Harris.
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144. Tell him about the time Boo tried
to kill his papa.
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145. I was standing
in my yard one day
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146. when his mama come out yelling,
"He's killing us all."
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147. Turned out that Boo was sitting
in the living room
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148. cutting up the paper
for his scrapbook,
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149. and when his daddy come by,
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150. he reached over with his scissors,
stabbed him in his leg,
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151. pulled them out and went right on
cutting the paper.
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152. They wanted to send
him to an asylum.
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153. But his daddy said,
"No Radley is going to any asylum."
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154. So they locked him up in the basement
of the courthouse
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155. till he nearly died of the damp,
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156. and his daddy
brought him back home.
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157. There he is, to this day,
sitting over there with his scissors.
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158. Lord knows what
he's doing or thinking.
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159. Six, seven, eight,
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160. nine, ten.
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161. Come on, Scout.
It's 5:00.
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162. Where are you going?
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163. Time to meet Atticus.
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164. Why do you call
your daddy Atticus?
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165. Because Jem does.
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166. But why does he?
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167. I don't know. He just started to ever
since he began talking.
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168. Wait, stop.
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169. Mrs. Dubose is
on her porch.
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170. Listen, no matter what she says to you,
don't answer her back.
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171. There's a Confederate pistol in her lap
under her shawl
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172. and she'll kill you as quick as look at you.
Come on.
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173. Hey, Mrs. Dubose.
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174. Don't you say "hey"
to me, you ugly girl.
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175. You say, "Good afternoon,
Mrs. Dubose."
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176. You come over here
when I'm talking to you.
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177. You come over here...
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178. Hey, Atticus.
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179. - You listen to me...
- Atticus, this is Dill.
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180. How do you do, Dill?
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181. Don't your daddy teach you
to respect old people?
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182. You come back here,
Jean Louise Finch!
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183. Good afternoon,
Mrs. Dubose.
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184. My!
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185. You look like a picture
this afternoon.
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186. He don't say a picture of what.
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187. My goodness gracious,
look at your flowers.
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188. Have you ever seen anything
more beautiful?
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189. Mrs. Dubose, the gardens
at Bellingrath
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190. have nothing to compare
with your flowers.
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191. I don't think they're
as nice as last year.
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192. I can't agree with you.
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193. He gets her interested
in something nice
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194. so she forgets being mean.
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195. I think your yard is going to be the
showplace of this town.
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196. Well...
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197. Grand seeing you,
Mrs. Dubose.
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198. "I had two cats
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199. "which I brought ashore
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200. "on my first raft.
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201. "And I had a dog."
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202. Atticus, do you think
Boo Radley ever really
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203. comes and looks in
my window at night?
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204. Jem says he does.
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205. This afternoon when we were over
by their house...
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206. Scout.
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207. I told you and Jem to leave those
poor people alone.
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208. I want you to stay away from their house
and stop tormenting them.
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209. Yes, sir.
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210. I think that's all the reading for tonight,
honey. It's getting late.
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211. What time is it?
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212. 8:30.
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213. May I see your watch?
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214. "To Atticus,
my beloved husband."
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215. Atticus, Jem says this watch is going to
belong to him someday.
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216. That's right.
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217. Why?
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218. Well,
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219. it's customary for the boy
to have his father's watch.
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220. What are you going to give me?
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221. I don't know that I have
much else of value that belongs to me.
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222. But there's a pearl necklace,
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223. there's a ring that
belonged to your mother.
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224. And I've put them away,
and they're to be yours.
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225. Good night, Scout.
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226. Good night.
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227. - Good night, Jem.
- Good night.
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228. Jem?
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229. Yeah.
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230. How old was I when Mama died?
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231. Two.
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232. And how old were you?
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233. Six.
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234. As old as I am now?
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235. Mmm-hmm.
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236. Was Mama pretty?
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237. Mmm-hmm.
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238. Was Mama nice?
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239. Mmm-hmm.
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240. Did you love her?
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241. Yeah.
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242. Did I love her?
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243. Yeah.
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244. Do you miss her?
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245. Mmm-hmm
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246. Evening, Atticus.
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247. Good evening, Judge.
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248. Rather warm, isn't it?
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249. Yes, indeed.
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250. How's Mrs. Taylor?
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251. She's fine, thank you.
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252. Atticus, you've heard
about Tom Robinson?
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253. Yes, sir.
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254. Grand jury will get around
to charging him tomorrow.
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255. I was thinking about appointing
you to take his case.
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256. I realize you're very busy these days
with your practice
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257. and your children need
a great deal of your time.
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258. Yes, sir.
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259. I'll take the case.
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260. I'll send a boy over for you tomorrow,
when his hearing comes up.
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261. Well, uh,
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262. I'll see you tomorrow, Atticus.
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263. Yes, sir.
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264. And thank you.
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265. Yes, sir.
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266. Hey, Jem.
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267. I bet you a Gray Ghost
against two Tom Swifts
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268. you wouldn't go any farther than
Boo Radley's gate.
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269. You're scared to, ain't you?
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270. I ain't scared.
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271. I go past Boo Radley's house
nearly every day of my life.
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272. Always running.
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273. You hush up, Scout.
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274. Come on, Dill.
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275. Me first!
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276. You gotta let Dill be first.
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277. No, me.
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278. Let her be first.
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279. All right, get in.
Hurry up.
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280. All right.
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281. You ready?
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282. Uh-huh. Let her go.
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283. Scout!
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284. Scout, get away from there!
Scout, come on!
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285. Scout, don't just
lie there. Get up!
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286. Come on, Scout.
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287. Run for your life, Scout!
Come on, Dill.
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288. Now who's a coward?
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289. You tell them about this backin Meridian County,
Mr. Dill Harris.
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290. I'll tell you what let's do.
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291. Let's go down to the courthouse
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292. and see the room
they locked Boo up in.
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293. My aunt says it's bat-infested,
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294. and he nearly died
from the mildew.
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295. Come on,
I bet they've got chains
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296. and instruments of
torture down there.
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297. Come on.
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298. Young Finch.
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299. Yes, sir.
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300. If you're looking
for your daddy,
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301. he's inside the courthouse.
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302. Thank you, sir,
but we're not looking for...
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303. Thank you,
Mr. Townsend, sir.
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304. What is your daddy doing
in the courthouse?
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305. He's a lawyer and he has a case.
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306. The grand jury is charging
his client today.
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307. I heard something about it last night
when Judge Taylor came over.
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308. Let's go watch.
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309. No, Dill.
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310. He wouldn't like that.
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311. Dill!
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312. Dill, wait a minute.
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313. Is that the courtroom?
Yeah.
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314. Shh.
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315. I can't see anything.
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316. Shh.
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317. You all lift me up so I can see
what's going on.
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318. All right.
Make a saddle, Scout.
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319. Not much is happening.
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320. The judge looks
like he's asleep.
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321. I see your daddy
and a colored man.
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322. The colored man...
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323. Shh.
Copy !req
324. The colored man looks
to me like he's crying.
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325. And I've seen him...
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326. I wonder what he's
done to cry about.
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327. What's going on?
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328. There's a whole lot of men sitting
together on one side
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329. and one man keeps pointing
at the colored man and yelling.
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330. They're taking
the colored man away.
Copy !req
331. Where's Atticus?
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332. I can't see
your daddy now, either.
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333. I wonder where in the world...
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334. Scout, Jem.
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335. What in the world
are you doing here?
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336. Hello, Atticus.
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337. What are you doing here?
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338. We came down to find
out where Boo Radley was locked up.
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339. We wanted to see the bats.
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340. I want you all
back home right away.
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341. Yes, sir.
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342. Run along, now.
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343. I'll see you there for dinner.
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344. Hey, Atticus.
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345. Mr. Ewell.
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346. Captain, I'm real sorry
they picked you
Copy !req
347. to defend that nigger
that raped my Mayella.
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348. I don't know why
I didn't kill him myself
Copy !req
349. instead of going to the sheriff.
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350. That would've saved
you and the sheriff
Copy !req
351. and the taxpayers
lots of trouble.
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352. Excuse me, Mr. Ewell,
I'm very busy.
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353. Hey, captain,
somebody told me just now that
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354. they thought that you
believed Tom Robinson's story against ours.
Copy !req
355. And you know what I said?
Copy !req
356. I said, "You're wrong, man.
You're dead wrong.
Copy !req
357. "Mr. Finch ain't taking
his story against ours."
Copy !req
358. They was wrong, wasn't they?
Copy !req
359. I've been appointed
to defend Tom Robinson.
Copy !req
360. And now that he's been charged,
that's what I intend to do.
Copy !req
361. You're taking his...
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362. If you'll excuse me,
Mr. Ewell.
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363. What kind of man are you?
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364. You've got children of your own.
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365. Hey, Jem.
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366. Jem?
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367. I think we ought to stay right here in
Miss Stephanie's yard.
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368. You don't have to come along,
Angel Mae.
Copy !req
369. What are you going to do?
Copy !req
370. We're going to look in the window
at the Radley house
Copy !req
371. and see if we can get
a look at Boo Radley.
Copy !req
372. Come on, Dill.
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373. Jem, please, I'm scared.
Copy !req
374. Then go home if you're scared!
Copy !req
375. I swear, Scout,
you act more like a girl all the time.
Copy !req
376. Come on, Dill.
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377. Wait for me.
I'm coming.
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378. Shh.
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379. We'll go around back,
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380. crawl under the high wire
fence at the rear of the Radley lot.
Copy !req
381. I don't believe we can
be seen from there.
Copy !req
382. Shh.
Copy !req
383. Come on.
Copy !req
384. Come on.
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385. Come on.
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386. Come on, help me.
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387. Shh.
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388. Don't make a sound.
Copy !req
389. Spit on it.
Copy !req
390. All right.
Copy !req
391. Jem...
Shh.
Copy !req
392. Spit some more.
Copy !req
393. All right.
Copy !req
394. Come on.
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395. Hurry.
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396. Hurry.
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397. Scout.
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398. Scout.
Copy !req
399. Quick.
Come over here.
Copy !req
400. Shh. Shh. Quiet.
Copy !req
401. What are you going
to do for pants, Jem?
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402. I don't know.
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403. Dill?
Copy !req
404. Dill!
Copy !req
405. You come on in, now.
Copy !req
406. Shh.
Copy !req
407. I'd better go.
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408. Dill?
Copy !req
409. Coming, Aunt Stephanie.
Copy !req
410. So long.
I'll see you next summer.
Copy !req
411. So long.
So long.
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412. Dill?
Copy !req
413. I'm coming.
Copy !req
414. I'm going back after my pants.
Copy !req
415. Please, Jem,
come on in the house.
Copy !req
416. I can't go in without my pants.
Copy !req
417. Then I'm going to call Atticus.
Copy !req
418. No, you're not.
Copy !req
419. Now, listen. Atticus ain't never whipped me
since I can remember
Copy !req
420. and I plan to keep it that way.
Copy !req
421. Then I'm going with you.
Copy !req
422. You ain't.
Copy !req
423. You stay right here.
I'll be back before you can count to 10.
Copy !req
424. Jem.
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425. One, two,
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426. three, four...
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427. Jem.
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428. Scout. Come on in.
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429. Five, six, seven,
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430. eight, nine, ten,
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431. eleven, twelve,
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432. thirteen, fourteen.
Copy !req
433. Jem.
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434. Shh.
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435. Shh.
Copy !req
436. What was that?
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437. What is it? What happened?
Copy !req
438. What's going on?
What is it?
Copy !req
439. Atticus, what is it?
Copy !req
440. Will somebody please tell me
what's going on?
Copy !req
441. Mr. Radley shot at a prowler out
in his collard patch.
Copy !req
442. A prowler? Oh, Maudie!
Copy !req
443. Whoever it was won't
be back anytime soon.
Copy !req
444. Mr. Radley must've scared them
out of their wits.
Copy !req
445. Good night.
Good night.
Copy !req
446. Good night, Atticus.
Copy !req
447. Scared the living
daylights out of me.
Copy !req
448. I swear, a prowler.
He said a prowler.
Copy !req
449. Come on, now.
The excitement is over. Time for bed.
Copy !req
450. Scout, Jem.
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451. Morning.
Copy !req
452. Good morning, Miss Maudie.
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453. Morning, Calpurnia.
Copy !req
454. I came to see Jean Louise ready for
her first day at school.
Copy !req
455. Scout.
Morning, Mrs. Maudie.
Copy !req
456. All ready for school?
Yes, ma'am.
Copy !req
457. Scout!
Copy !req
458. What are you going to do with yourself
this morning
Copy !req
459. with both children at school?
Copy !req
460. I don't know,
and that's the truth.
Copy !req
461. I was thinking
about that just now.
Copy !req
462. Scout?
Copy !req
463. Scout? Scout!
Copy !req
464. Did you hear me, Scout?
Now, hurry.
Copy !req
465. Hey, everybody, look at Scout.
Copy !req
466. Shh.
Copy !req
467. Come on in here, Scout.
Copy !req
468. Have your breakfast.
Copy !req
469. I think your dress is
mighty becoming, honey.
Copy !req
470. Now don't go tugging
at that dress, Scout.
Copy !req
471. You want to have it all wrinkled before
you even get to school?
Copy !req
472. I still don't see
why I have to wear a darn old dress.
Copy !req
473. You'll get used to it.
Copy !req
474. I'm ready.
Oh, Jem.
Copy !req
475. Jem...
Copy !req
476. It's half an hour
before school starts.
Copy !req
477. Sit back down and
wait for your sister.
Copy !req
478. Well, hurry up, Scout.
Copy !req
479. I'm trying to.
Copy !req
480. Come on. It's your first day.
You want to be late?
Copy !req
481. - I'm ready.
- Come on, let's go.
Copy !req
482. Bye.
Copy !req
483. Bye, bye.
Copy !req
484. Darn you, Walter Cunningham!
Copy !req
485. Come on, Walter!
Copy !req
486. Cut that out!
What do you think you're doing?
Copy !req
487. He made me start off
on the wrong foot!
Copy !req
488. I was trying to explain to that
darn lady teacher
Copy !req
489. why he didn't have no money
for his lunch and she got sore at me.
Copy !req
490. Stop it! Stop it!
Copy !req
491. Is your daddy
Mr. Walter Cunningham from Old Sarum?
Copy !req
492. Come home and have dinner with us, Walter.
We'd be glad to have you.
Copy !req
493. Our daddy's a friend
of your daddy's.
Copy !req
494. Scout here is crazy.
She won't fight you no more.
Copy !req
495. I hope that's
a dinner that you enjoy.
Copy !req
496. Yes, sir. I don't know
when I've had a roast.
Copy !req
497. We've been having squirrels
and rabbits lately.
Copy !req
498. My pa and I go hunting
in our spare time.
Copy !req
499. You've got a gun of your own?
Copy !req
500. Uh-huh.
Copy !req
501. How long have you had a gun?
Copy !req
502. A year or so.
Copy !req
503. Can I have the syrup, please?
Copy !req
504. Certainly, son.
Copy !req
505. Cal. Will you bring in
the syrup dish, please?
Copy !req
506. Yes, sir.
Copy !req
507. How old were you when you got
your first gun, Atticus?
Copy !req
508. Thirteen or fourteen.
Copy !req
509. I remember when my daddy
gave me that gun.
Copy !req
510. He told me that I should never point
at anything in the house.
Copy !req
511. And that he'd rather
I'd shoot at tin cans in the backyard.
Copy !req
512. But he said that sooner or later
he'd suppose the temptation
Copy !req
513. to go after birds
would be too much.
Copy !req
514. That I could shoot all the blue jays
I wanted if I could hit them.
Copy !req
515. But to remember it was a sin
to kill a mockingbird.
Copy !req
516. Why?
Copy !req
517. I reckon because mockingbirds
Copy !req
518. don't do anything but
make music for us to enjoy.
Copy !req
519. They don't eat people's gardens,
don't nest in the corncribs.
Copy !req
520. They don't do one thing,
but just sing their hearts out for us.
Copy !req
521. How did you like school, Scout?
Copy !req
522. All right.
Copy !req
523. Thank you, Cal.
That's for Walter.
Copy !req
524. What in the Sam Hill are you doing...
Copy !req
525. But, Atticus, he's gone
and drowned his dinner in syrup
Copy !req
526. and now he's pouring it
all over.
Copy !req
527. Scout.
Copy !req
528. What?
Copy !req
529. Come out here.
I want to talk to you.
Copy !req
530. That boy is your company
Copy !req
531. and if he wants to eat up that tablecloth,
you'll let him, you hear?
Copy !req
532. And if you can't act
fit to eat like folks,
Copy !req
533. you can just sit here
and eat in the kitchen.
Copy !req
534. Scout.
Copy !req
535. Scout.
Copy !req
536. Scout, what in the world
has got into you?
Copy !req
537. Not going back.
Copy !req
538. Now, now.
Copy !req
539. Not going back.
Copy !req
540. Atticus, I'm not going
back to school anymore.
Copy !req
541. Scout, it's just the first day.
Copy !req
542. I don't care.
Everything went wrong.
Copy !req
543. My teacher got mad
as the devil at me
Copy !req
544. and said you were teaching me
to read all wrong, and to stop it.
Copy !req
545. Then acted like a fool
Copy !req
546. and tried to give
Walter Cunningham a quarter
Copy !req
547. when everybody knows Cunninghams
won't take nothing from nobody.
Copy !req
548. Any fool could have
told her that.
Copy !req
549. Well...
Copy !req
550. Maybe she's just nervous.
Copy !req
551. After all,
it's her first day, too,
Copy !req
552. teaching school
and being new here.
Copy !req
553. Oh, Atticus.
Copy !req
554. Now, wait a minute.
Copy !req
555. If you just learn
a single trick, Scout,
Copy !req
556. you'll get along a lot better with
all kinds of folks.
Copy !req
557. You never really
understand a person
Copy !req
558. until you consider things
from his point of view.
Copy !req
559. Sir?
Copy !req
560. Until you climb inside of his skin
and walk around in it.
Copy !req
561. But if I keep going to school,
we can't ever read anymore.
Copy !req
562. Scout?
Copy !req
563. Do you know what
a compromise is?
Copy !req
564. Bending the law?
Copy !req
565. Uh...
Copy !req
566. No. It's an agreement
reached by mutual consent.
Copy !req
567. Here is the way it works.
Copy !req
568. You concede the necessity
of going to school
Copy !req
569. and we'll keep right on reading
the same every night,
Copy !req
570. just as we always have.
Copy !req
571. Is that a bargain?
Copy !req
572. There just didn't seem
to be anyone or anything
Copy !req
573. Atticus couldn't explain.
Copy !req
574. Though it wasn't a talent
that would arouse
Copy !req
575. the admiration of
any of our friends,
Copy !req
576. Jem and I had to admit
he was very good at that.
Copy !req
577. But that was all
he was good at, we thought.
Copy !req
578. See, there he is!
Copy !req
579. Scout, Jem, come on inside.
Copy !req
580. Come on, get in.
Copy !req
581. Mr. Finch? This is Cal.
Copy !req
582. I swear to God,
there's a mad dog down the street apiece.
Copy !req
583. He's coming this way.
Copy !req
584. There he is.
Copy !req
585. He's got it all right,
Mr. Finch.
Copy !req
586. Stay inside, Son.
Keep him in there, Cal.
Copy !req
587. He's within range, Heck.
Copy !req
588. Take him, Mr. Finch.
Copy !req
589. No, Mr. Tate.
He can't shoot.
Copy !req
590. Don't waste time.
Copy !req
591. For God's sake,
Mr. Finch,
Copy !req
592. he's got to be killed right away,
before he starts running.
Copy !req
593. Look where he is.
I can't shoot that well. You know it.
Copy !req
594. I haven't
shot a gun in years.
Copy !req
595. I'd feel mighty comfortable
if you did now.
Copy !req
596. Don't go near that dog,
do you understand?
Copy !req
597. He's just as dangerous
dead as alive.
Copy !req
598. Yes, sir.
Copy !req
599. Atticus?
Copy !req
600. Yes, Son.
Copy !req
601. Nothing.
Copy !req
602. What's the matter, boy?
Can't you talk?
Copy !req
603. Didn't you know your daddy is the
best shot in this county?
Copy !req
604. Hush, Heck.
Let's get back to town.
Copy !req
605. Remember,
don't go near that dog.
Copy !req
606. Yes, sir.
Copy !req
607. I'll send Zeebo out
right away to pick him up.
Copy !req
608. Hey, Atticus.
Can we go with you?
Copy !req
609. Can we, please?
Copy !req
610. Can we?
Copy !req
611. No. I have to go to the country
on business, and you'll just get tired.
Copy !req
612. No, not me.
I won't get tired.
Copy !req
613. Promise to stay in the car
while I go in and talk to Helen Robinson?
Copy !req
614. Mmm-hmm.
Copy !req
615. And not nag me about leaving
if you do get tired?
Copy !req
616. All right, climb in.
Copy !req
617. Who's Helen Robinson?
Copy !req
618. She's the wife of
the man I'm defending.
Copy !req
619. Good evening, David.
Copy !req
620. Evening.
Copy !req
621. Evening, Helen.
Copy !req
622. Evening, Mr. Finch.
Copy !req
623. I came over to tell you
about my visit with Tom.
Copy !req
624. Yes, sir.
And to let you know
Copy !req
625. that I got a postponement
of the trial.
Copy !req
626. Give things a chance
to cool down.
Copy !req
627. Would you tell my daddy
to come out here, please?
Copy !req
628. You nigger lover.
Copy !req
629. No need to be afraid of him,
Son. He's all bluff.
Copy !req
630. Nigger lover!
Copy !req
631. There's a lot of ugly things
in this world, Son.
Copy !req
632. I wish I could keep
them all away from you.
Copy !req
633. That's never possible.
Copy !req
634. Cal, you wait until I get Scout in bed.
I'll drive you home.
Copy !req
635. Yes, sir.
Copy !req
636. Jem, would you mind staying here with Scout
till I get Cal home?
Copy !req
637. No, sir.
Copy !req
638. Night, Jem.
Copy !req
639. Night, Cal.
Copy !req
640. Atticus! Atticus!
Copy !req
641. Atticus!
Copy !req
642. Atticus had promised me
he would wear me out
Copy !req
643. if he ever heard of
me fighting anymore.
Copy !req
644. I was far too old and too big
for such childish things
Copy !req
645. and the sooner
I learned to hold in,
Copy !req
646. the better off
everybody would be.
Copy !req
647. I soon forgot.
Copy !req
648. Cecil Jacobs made me forget.
Copy !req
649. What is it, Scout?
Copy !req
650. Atticus, do you defend niggers?
Copy !req
651. Don't say "nigger," Scout.
Copy !req
652. I didn't say it.
Copy !req
653. Cecil Jacobs did.
That's why I had to fight him.
Copy !req
654. Scout,
I don't want you fighting.
Copy !req
655. I had to, Atticus, he...
Copy !req
656. I don't care what
the reasons are.
Copy !req
657. I forbid you to fight.
Copy !req
658. Yes, sir.
Copy !req
659. Anyway, I'm simply defending a Negro,
Tom Robinson.
Copy !req
660. Scout,
Copy !req
661. there are some things that you're not
old enough to understand just yet.
Copy !req
662. There's been some
high talk around town
Copy !req
663. to the effect that I shouldn't do much
about defending this man.
Copy !req
664. If you shouldn't be defending him,
then why are you doing it?
Copy !req
665. For a number of reasons.
Copy !req
666. The main one is
that if I didn't,
Copy !req
667. I couldn't hold
my head up in town.
Copy !req
668. I couldn't even tell you or Jem not
to do something again.
Copy !req
669. Oh, Scout.
Copy !req
670. You're going to hear some ugly talk
about this in school.
Copy !req
671. But I want you to
promise me one thing,
Copy !req
672. that you won't get
into fights over it,
Copy !req
673. no matter what they say to you.
Copy !req
674. Yes, sir.
Copy !req
675. What're you doing?
Copy !req
676. I'm walking like an Egyptian.
Copy !req
677. We were studying
about them in school.
Copy !req
678. Teacher says we wouldn't be
no place without them.
Copy !req
679. Is that so?
Copy !req
680. Cradle of civilization.
They invented embalming and toilet paper.
Copy !req
681. That's wrong, Scout.
Copy !req
682. You dig your feet, this way.
Copy !req
683. Look, Jem.
Copy !req
684. Look, the boy wore his hair in front
of his eyebrows like you do.
Copy !req
685. And the girl
wears bangs like you.
Copy !req
686. These are us.
Copy !req
687. Jem, are you awake?
Copy !req
688. Go back to bed.
Copy !req
689. I can't go to sleep.
Copy !req
690. Go back to bed.
Copy !req
691. What you got in the box?
Copy !req
692. Nothing. Go back to bed.
Copy !req
693. Come on.
Copy !req
694. If I show you, will you swear
never to tell anybody?
Copy !req
695. I swear.
Copy !req
696. Cross your heart.
Copy !req
697. I found all of these
Copy !req
698. in the knothole of that old tree
at different times.
Copy !req
699. This is a spelling medal.
Copy !req
700. They used to award these in school
to spelling winners
Copy !req
701. before we were born.
Copy !req
702. And another time I found this.
Copy !req
703. And this.
Copy !req
704. And Scout...
Copy !req
705. Something else
I never told you about
Copy !req
706. that night I went back
to the Radley house.
Copy !req
707. Something else?
You never told me anything about that night.
Copy !req
708. Well...
Copy !req
709. You know the first time I was getting
out of my britches?
Copy !req
710. Uh-huh.
Copy !req
711. They was all in a tangle,
and I couldn't get them loose.
Copy !req
712. Well,
Copy !req
713. when I went back though,
Copy !req
714. they were folded
across the fence,
Copy !req
715. sort of like they
was expecting me.
Copy !req
716. It was to be a long time
Copy !req
717. before Jem and I
talked about Boo again.
Copy !req
718. School finally ended
and summer came
Copy !req
719. and so did Dill.
Copy !req
720. Good morning.
Copy !req
721. Good morning.
Copy !req
722. My, you're up
mighty bright and early.
Copy !req
723. I've been up since 4:00.
Copy !req
724. 4:00?
Copy !req
725. Yes. I always get up at 4:00.
It's in my blood.
Copy !req
726. You see, my daddy was a railroad man
until he got rich.
Copy !req
727. Now he flies airplanes.
Copy !req
728. One of these days, he's just
going to swoop down here at Maycomb,
Copy !req
729. pick me up,
and take me for a ride.
Copy !req
730. Who's that in the car
with Sheriff Tate?
Copy !req
731. Tom Robinson, Son.
Copy !req
732. Where's he been?
Copy !req
733. In the Abbotsville jail.
Copy !req
734. Why?
Copy !req
735. The sheriff thought
he'd be safer there.
Copy !req
736. They're bringing him
back here tonight,
Copy !req
737. because his trial is tomorrow.
Copy !req
738. Good evening, Heck.
Copy !req
739. Evening, Mr. Finch.
Copy !req
740. Come in.
Copy !req
741. The news has gotten
around the county
Copy !req
742. about my bringing
Tom Robinson back to the jail.
Copy !req
743. I heard there might be trouble
from that bunch out at Old Sarum.
Copy !req
744. Cal, if I need you to stay here tonight,
can you do it?
Copy !req
745. Yes, sir, I can.
Copy !req
746. Thank you.
Copy !req
747. I think you'd better
count on staying.
Copy !req
748. Yes, sir.
Copy !req
749. What's going on?
Copy !req
750. Shh. Go back to sleep.
Copy !req
751. What's going on?
Copy !req
752. Shh.
Copy !req
753. Hey, there's his car.
Copy !req
754. See, there he is, over there.
Copy !req
755. No, Scout, don't go to him.
He might not like it.
Copy !req
756. I just wanted to see where he was
and what he was up to.
Copy !req
757. He's all right.
Let's go back home.
Come on.
Copy !req
758. He in there, Mr. Finch?
Copy !req
759. He is. He's asleep.
Don't wake him.
Copy !req
760. You know what we want.
Copy !req
761. Get aside from that door,
Mr. Finch.
Copy !req
762. Walter,
Copy !req
763. I think you ought to turn right around
and go back home.
Copy !req
764. Heck Tate's
around here somewhere.
Copy !req
765. No, he ain't.
Copy !req
766. Heck and his bunch is out
chasing around Old Sarum looking for us.
Copy !req
767. We knew he was
so we came in this other way.
Copy !req
768. You ain't never
thought about that, had you, Mr. Finch?
Copy !req
769. I thought about it.
Copy !req
770. I can't see Atticus.
Copy !req
771. That changes things...
Copy !req
772. Atticus!
Copy !req
773. Hey, Atticus.
Copy !req
774. Jem, go home, and take Scout and
Dill home with you.
Copy !req
775. Son, I said, go home.
Copy !req
776. No, sir.
Copy !req
777. I'll send him home!
Copy !req
778. Don't you touch him.
Let him go!
Copy !req
779. That'll do, Scout.
Copy !req
780. Ain't nobody gonna
do Jem that way.
Copy !req
781. Now, you get them
out of here, Mr. Finch!
Copy !req
782. Jem, I want you to please leave.
Copy !req
783. No, sir.
Jem.
Copy !req
784. I tell you, I ain't going.
Copy !req
785. Hey, Mr. Cunningham.
Copy !req
786. I said, hey,
Mr. Cunningham.
Copy !req
787. How's your entailment
getting along?
Copy !req
788. Don't you remember me,
Mr. Cunningham?
Copy !req
789. I'm Jean Louise Finch.
Copy !req
790. You brought us some hickory nuts one
early morning, remember?
Copy !req
791. We had a talk.
Copy !req
792. I went and got my daddy
to come out and thank you.
Copy !req
793. I go to school with your boy.
I go to school with Walter.
Copy !req
794. He's a nice boy.
Tell him "hey" for me, won't you?
Copy !req
795. You know something,
Mr. Cunningham?
Copy !req
796. Entailments are bad.
Entailments...
Copy !req
797. Atticus, I was just saying
to Mr. Cunningham that entailments were bad
Copy !req
798. but not to worry.
Takes a long time sometimes.
Copy !req
799. What's the matter?
Copy !req
800. I sure meant no harm,
Mr. Cunningham.
Copy !req
801. No harm taken, young lady.
Copy !req
802. I'll tell Walter
you said "hey."
Copy !req
803. Let's clear out of here.
Copy !req
804. Let's go, boys.
Copy !req
805. Now, you go home.
All of you.
Copy !req
806. I'll be there later.
Copy !req
807. Good luck.
Copy !req
808. Come on.
Copy !req
809. Mr. Finch, are they gone?
Copy !req
810. They've gone.
They won't bother you anymore.
Copy !req
811. Morning, Mr. Sykes.
Copy !req
812. How do you do?
Ever see so many people?
Copy !req
813. Just like on Saturday.
Copy !req
814. Where you going?
Copy !req
815. I can't stand it any longer.
I'm going downtown to the courthouse to watch.
Copy !req
816. You'd better not.
You know what Atticus said.
Copy !req
817. I don't care if he did.
Copy !req
818. I'm not going to miss
the most exciting thing
Copy !req
819. that ever happened in this town.
Copy !req
820. It's packed solid.
They're standing all along the back.
Copy !req
821. Reverend.
Copy !req
822. Yes?
Copy !req
823. Reverend Sykes,
are you going upstairs?
Copy !req
824. Yes, I am.
Copy !req
825. Thanks, Brother Jones,
for holding my seat.
Copy !req
826. Please be seated.
Copy !req
827. Come on, children.
Copy !req
828. It's the Rev.
Copy !req
829. - This court is now in session.
- Everybody rise.
Copy !req
830. On the night of August 21,
Copy !req
831. I was just leaving my office
to go home when Bob...
Copy !req
832. Mr. Ewell came in.
Copy !req
833. Very excited, he was, and he said
to get to his house as quick as I could,
Copy !req
834. that his girl had been raped.
Copy !req
835. I got to my car and went out there
as fast as I could.
Copy !req
836. She was pretty well beat up.
Copy !req
837. I asked her if Tom Robinson
beat her like that.
Copy !req
838. She said, "Yes, he had."
Copy !req
839. I asked if he'd
taken advantage of her.
Copy !req
840. She said, "Yes, he did."
Copy !req
841. That's all there was to it.
Copy !req
842. Thank you.
Copy !req
843. Did anybody
call a doctor, Sheriff?
Copy !req
844. No, sir.
Why not?
Copy !req
845. I didn't think it was necessary.
Copy !req
846. She was pretty well beat up.
Something sure happened, it was obvious.
Copy !req
847. Sheriff, you say she
was mighty beat up.
Copy !req
848. In what way?
Copy !req
849. She was beaten around the head.
Copy !req
850. There were bruises
already coming on her arms.
Copy !req
851. She had a black eye starting.
Copy !req
852. Which eye?
Copy !req
853. Let's see, it was her left.
Copy !req
854. Now, was that...
Copy !req
855. Was that her left, facing you, or looking
the way that you were?
Copy !req
856. Yes, that would make it
her right eye.
Copy !req
857. It was her right eye,
Mr. Finch. Now I remember.
Copy !req
858. She was beaten up on
that side of her face.
Copy !req
859. Which side, again?
Copy !req
860. Her right side.
Copy !req
861. She had bruises on her arms.
Copy !req
862. And she showed me her neck.
Copy !req
863. There were definite
finger marks on her gullet.
Copy !req
864. All around
Copy !req
865. her neck,
at the back of her throat?
Copy !req
866. I'd say they were all around.
Copy !req
867. The witness may be seated.
Copy !req
868. Robert E. Lee Ewell.
Copy !req
869. Place your hand
on the Bible, please.
Copy !req
870. Do you solemnly swear
to tell the truth, the whole truth,
Copy !req
871. and nothing but the truth,
so help you God?
Copy !req
872. I do.
Sit down, please.
Copy !req
873. Now, Mr. Ewell,
Copy !req
874. will you tell us, just in your own words,
what happened on August 21?
Copy !req
875. Late that night,
Copy !req
876. I was coming in from the woods,
with a load of kindling
Copy !req
877. and I heard Mayella screaming
as I got to the fence.
Copy !req
878. So, I dropped my kindling
and run just as fast as I could,
Copy !req
879. but I run into the fence.
Copy !req
880. But when I got loose,
Copy !req
881. I run up to the window,
and I seen him with my Mayella.
Copy !req
882. What did you do after
you saw the defendant?
Copy !req
883. I ran around the house
trying to get in,
Copy !req
884. but he done run through the front door,
just ahead of me.
Copy !req
885. But I seen who it was,
all right.
Copy !req
886. I seen him!
Copy !req
887. And I run in the house
Copy !req
888. and poor Mayella was lying on the floor,
squalling.
Copy !req
889. Then I run for Mr. Tate
as quick as I could.
Copy !req
890. Mmm-hmm.
Copy !req
891. Thank you, Mr. Ewell.
Copy !req
892. Would you mind if I just
ask you a few questions, Mr. Ewell?
Copy !req
893. No, sir, Mr. Finch,
I sure wouldn't.
Copy !req
894. Folks were doing a lot
of running that night.
Copy !req
895. Let's see, now.
Copy !req
896. You say that you ran into the house,
you ran to the window,
Copy !req
897. you ran inside, you ran to Mayella,
and you ran to Sheriff Tate.
Copy !req
898. Did you, during all this running,
run for a doctor?
Copy !req
899. There wasn't no need to.
I seen who done it.
Copy !req
900. Now, Mr. Ewell,
you've heard the sheriff's testimony.
Copy !req
901. Do you agree with his description
of Mayella's injuries?
Copy !req
902. I agree with everything
Mr. Tate said.
Copy !req
903. Her eye was blacked.
She was mighty beat up.
Copy !req
904. Mr. Ewell, can you...
Copy !req
905. Can you read and write?
Copy !req
906. Yes, Mr. Finch.
I can read and I can write.
Copy !req
907. Good.
Copy !req
908. Then will you write
your name, please?
Copy !req
909. Right there. Show us.
Copy !req
910. Now what's so interesting?
Copy !req
911. You're left-handed,
Mr. Ewell.
Copy !req
912. What's that got to do with it, Judge?
I'm a God-fearing man.
Copy !req
913. That Atticus Finch,
he's trying to take advantage of me.
Copy !req
914. You've got to watch tricky lawyers
like Atticus Finch.
Copy !req
915. Quiet, sir.
Copy !req
916. The witness may take his seat.
Copy !req
917. Mayella Violet Ewell.
Copy !req
918. Put your hand on
the Bible, please.
Copy !req
919. Solemnly swear to tell the truth,
the whole truth,
Copy !req
920. and nothing but the truth,
so help you God?
Copy !req
921. Sit down, please.
Copy !req
922. Now, Mayella,
Copy !req
923. suppose you tell us
just what happened, huh?
Copy !req
924. Well, sir...
Copy !req
925. Sir,
Copy !req
926. I was sitting on the porch
and he come along.
Copy !req
927. There was this old
chifforobe in the yard
Copy !req
928. and I said,
Copy !req
929. "You come in here, boy, and bust up
this chifforobe and I'll give you a nickel."
Copy !req
930. So, he come on in the yard
Copy !req
931. and I go in the house
to get him the nickel.
Copy !req
932. And I turn around,
and before I know it he's on me.
Copy !req
933. I fought and hollered,
but he had me around the neck
Copy !req
934. and he hit me again and again.
Copy !req
935. And the next thing I knew,
Copy !req
936. Papa was in the room,
standing over me, hollering,
Copy !req
937. "Who done it?"
Copy !req
938. Thank you, Mayella.
Copy !req
939. Your witness, Atticus.
Copy !req
940. Miss Mayella,
Copy !req
941. is your father good to you?
Copy !req
942. I mean, is he easy
to get along with?
Copy !req
943. Does tolerable.
Copy !req
944. Except when he's drinking?
Copy !req
945. When he's riled,
has he ever beaten you?
Copy !req
946. My pa's never touched
a hair on my head in my life.
Copy !req
947. You say that you asked Tom
to come in and chop up a...
Copy !req
948. What was it?
Copy !req
949. A chifforobe.
Copy !req
950. Was that the first time that you
ever asked him to come inside the fence?
Copy !req
951. Yes.
Copy !req
952. Didn't you ever ask him to come inside
the fence before?
Copy !req
953. I might have.
Copy !req
954. But can you remember
any other occasion?
Copy !req
955. No.
Copy !req
956. You say,
Copy !req
957. "He caught me, he choked me,
Copy !req
958. "and took advantage of me,"
is that right?
Copy !req
959. Do you remember him
beating you about the face?
Copy !req
960. No, I don't
Copy !req
961. recollect if he hit me.
Copy !req
962. I mean, yes, he hit me!
Copy !req
963. Thank you.
Copy !req
964. Will you identify
the man who beat you?
Copy !req
965. Most certainly will.
Sitting right yonder.
Copy !req
966. Tom, will you stand up, please?
Copy !req
967. Let Miss Mayella have a good,
long look at you.
Copy !req
968. Tom, will you catch this,
please?
Copy !req
969. Thank you.
Copy !req
970. Now, then, this time,
Copy !req
971. will you please catch it with
your left hand?
Copy !req
972. I can't, sir.
Copy !req
973. Why can't you?
Copy !req
974. I can't use my left hand at all.
Copy !req
975. I got it caught in a cotton gin
when I was 12 years old.
Copy !req
976. All my muscles were tore loose.
Copy !req
977. Is this the man who raped you?
Copy !req
978. Most certainly is.
Copy !req
979. How?
Copy !req
980. I don't know how.
Copy !req
981. He just done it.
Copy !req
982. You have testified
that he choked you
Copy !req
983. and he beat you.
Copy !req
984. You didn't say that he sneaked up
behind you and knocked you out cold,
Copy !req
985. but that you turned around
Copy !req
986. and there he was.
Copy !req
987. Do you want to tell us
what really happened?
Copy !req
988. I've got something to say!
Copy !req
989. And then I ain't
gonna say no more!
Copy !req
990. He took advantage of me.
Copy !req
991. And if you fine, fancy gentlemen
Copy !req
992. ain't going to do
nothing about it,
Copy !req
993. then you're just a bunch of lousy,
yellow, stinking cowards!
Copy !req
994. The whole bunch of you!
Copy !req
995. And your fancy airs
don't come to nothing!
Copy !req
996. Your "ma'am-ing"
and your "Miss Mayella-ing,"
Copy !req
997. it don't come to nothing,
Mr. Finch!
Copy !req
998. Sit down, there.
Copy !req
999. Poor girl.
Copy !req
1000. Atticus?
Copy !req
1001. Mr. Gilmer?
Copy !req
1002. The State rests, Judge.
Copy !req
1003. Tom Robinson, take the stand.
Copy !req
1004. Put your hand on the Bible.
Copy !req
1005. Do you solemnly swear to tell the truth,
the whole truth,
Copy !req
1006. and nothing but the truth,
so help you God?
Copy !req
1007. I do.
Sit down.
Copy !req
1008. Now, Tom...
Copy !req
1009. Were you acquainted
with Mayella Violet Ewell?
Copy !req
1010. Yes, sir.
Copy !req
1011. I had to pass her place going to
and from the field every day.
Copy !req
1012. Is there any other way to go?
Copy !req
1013. No, sir, none as I know of.
Copy !req
1014. And did she ever speak to you?
Copy !req
1015. Yes, sir.
Copy !req
1016. I'd tip my hat when I'd go by.
Copy !req
1017. One day she asked me
to come inside the fence,
Copy !req
1018. bust up a chifforobe for her.
Copy !req
1019. She gave me the hatchet
and I broke it up.
Copy !req
1020. And then she said,
"I reckon I'll have to give you a nickel, won't I?"
Copy !req
1021. And I said, "No, ma'am,
there ain't no charge."
Copy !req
1022. Then I went home.
Copy !req
1023. Mr. Finch, that was way last spring,
way over a year ago.
Copy !req
1024. And did you ever go
on the place again?
Copy !req
1025. Yes, sir.
Copy !req
1026. When?
Copy !req
1027. I went lots of times.
Copy !req
1028. Seemed like every time
I passed by yonder,
Copy !req
1029. she'd have some little
something for me to do.
Copy !req
1030. Chopping kindling and
toting water for her.
Copy !req
1031. Tom,
Copy !req
1032. what happened to you
on the evening of August 21 of last year?
Copy !req
1033. Mr. Finch,
Copy !req
1034. I was going home as
usual that evening.
Copy !req
1035. When I passed the Ewell place,
Copy !req
1036. Miss Mayella was on the porch,
like she said she was.
Copy !req
1037. She said for me to come there
and help her a minute.
Copy !req
1038. I went inside the fence
Copy !req
1039. and I looked around for some kindling
to work on,
Copy !req
1040. but I didn't see nothing.
Copy !req
1041. And then she said
to come in the house,
Copy !req
1042. she has a door
that needs fixing.
Copy !req
1043. So I follows her inside
and looked at the door
Copy !req
1044. and it looked all right.
Copy !req
1045. Then she shut the door.
Copy !req
1046. All the time I was wondering
why it was so quiet like.
Copy !req
1047. Then it come to me,
there was not a child on the place.
Copy !req
1048. And I said, "Miss Mayella,
where are the children?"
Copy !req
1049. And she said they all
gone to get ice cream.
Copy !req
1050. She said it took her a slap year to
save seven nickels,
Copy !req
1051. but she done it,
and they all gone to town.
Copy !req
1052. What did you say then?
Copy !req
1053. I said something like,
Copy !req
1054. "Why, Miss Mayella,
it's right nice of you to treat them."
Copy !req
1055. And she said,
"You think so?"
Copy !req
1056. Well, I said I best be going,
I couldn't do nothing for her.
Copy !req
1057. And she said, oh, yes, I could.
Copy !req
1058. And I asked her, "What?"
Copy !req
1059. And she said to just step
on the chair yonder
Copy !req
1060. and get that box down
from on top of the chifforobe.
Copy !req
1061. So I done like she told me
Copy !req
1062. and I was reaching
Copy !req
1063. and the next thing I know,
Copy !req
1064. she grabbed me around the legs.
Copy !req
1065. She scared me so bad,
I hopped down and turned the chair over.
Copy !req
1066. That was the only thing,
Copy !req
1067. the only furniture
disturbed in the room,
Copy !req
1068. Mr. Finch, I swear,
when I left it.
Copy !req
1069. And what happened
after you turned the chair over?
Copy !req
1070. Tom?
Copy !req
1071. You've sworn to tell
the whole truth.
Copy !req
1072. Will you do it?
Copy !req
1073. What happened after that?
Copy !req
1074. Mr. Finch,
Copy !req
1075. I got down off the chair
and I turned around
Copy !req
1076. and she sort of jumped on me.
Copy !req
1077. She hugged me around the waist.
Copy !req
1078. She reached up and
kissed me on the face.
Copy !req
1079. She said she had never kissed
a grown man before
Copy !req
1080. and she might as well kiss me.
Copy !req
1081. She said for me
to kiss her back.
Copy !req
1082. And I said, "Miss Mayella,
let me out of here."
Copy !req
1083. And I tried to run.
Copy !req
1084. Then Mr. Ewell cussed
at her from the window
Copy !req
1085. and said he's going to kill her.
Copy !req
1086. What happened after that?
Copy !req
1087. I was running so fast,
I don't know what happened.
Copy !req
1088. Tom, did you rape Mayella Ewell?
Copy !req
1089. I did not, sir.
Copy !req
1090. Did you harm her in any way?
Copy !req
1091. I did not, sir.
Copy !req
1092. Robinson,
Copy !req
1093. you're pretty good at
busting up chifforobes
Copy !req
1094. and kindling with
one hand, aren't you?
Copy !req
1095. Strong enough to choke the breath
out of a woman
Copy !req
1096. and sling her to the floor?
Copy !req
1097. I've never done that, sir.
Copy !req
1098. But you're strong enough to?
Copy !req
1099. I reckon so, sir.
Copy !req
1100. Mmm-hmm.
Copy !req
1101. How come you were so all-fired anxious
to do that woman's chores?
Copy !req
1102. Looks like she didn't have
nobody to help her.
Copy !req
1103. Like I said...
Copy !req
1104. With Mr. Ewell and seven
children on the place?
Copy !req
1105. You did all this chopping and work
out of sheer goodness, boy?
Copy !req
1106. You're a mighty
good fellow, it seems.
Copy !req
1107. Did all that for not one penny.
Copy !req
1108. Yes, sir.
Copy !req
1109. I felt right sorry for her.
She seemed...
Copy !req
1110. You felt sorry for her?
Copy !req
1111. A white woman?
Copy !req
1112. You felt sorry for her.
Copy !req
1113. To begin with,
Copy !req
1114. this case should never
have come to trial.
Copy !req
1115. The State has not produced one iota
of medical evidence
Copy !req
1116. that the crime
Tom Robinson is charged with
Copy !req
1117. ever took place.
Copy !req
1118. It has relied instead upon the testimony
of two witnesses
Copy !req
1119. whose evidence has not only been called
into serious question
Copy !req
1120. on cross-examination,
Copy !req
1121. but has been flatly contradicted
by the defendant.
Copy !req
1122. There is circumstantial
evidence to indicate
Copy !req
1123. that Mayella Ewell
was beaten savagely
Copy !req
1124. by someone who led,
almost exclusively, with his left.
Copy !req
1125. And Tom Robinson now sits before you,
having taken the oath
Copy !req
1126. with the only good
hand he possesses,
Copy !req
1127. his right.
Copy !req
1128. I have nothing
but pity in my heart
Copy !req
1129. for the chief witness
for the State.
Copy !req
1130. She is the victim of cruel poverty
and ignorance.
Copy !req
1131. But my pity does
not extend so far
Copy !req
1132. as to her putting
a man's life at stake,
Copy !req
1133. which she has done in an effort to get
rid of her own guilt.
Copy !req
1134. I say "guilt," gentlemen,
Copy !req
1135. because it was guilt
that motivated her.
Copy !req
1136. She's committed no crime.
Copy !req
1137. She has merely broken a rigid
and time-honored code of our society.
Copy !req
1138. A code so severe, that whoever breaks
it is hounded from our midst
Copy !req
1139. as unfit to live with.
Copy !req
1140. She must destroy the evidence
of her offense.
Copy !req
1141. But, what was the evidence
of her offense?
Copy !req
1142. Tom Robinson, a human being.
Copy !req
1143. She must put Tom Robinson
away from her.
Copy !req
1144. Tom Robinson was to
her a daily reminder
Copy !req
1145. of what she did.
Copy !req
1146. What did she do?
Copy !req
1147. She tempted a Negro.
She was white, and she tempted a Negro.
Copy !req
1148. She did something
that in our society is unspeakable.
Copy !req
1149. She kissed a black man.
Copy !req
1150. Not an old uncle,
Copy !req
1151. but a strong, young Negro man.
Copy !req
1152. No code mattered to her
before she broke it.
Copy !req
1153. But it came crashing down
on her afterwards.
Copy !req
1154. The witnesses for the State,
Copy !req
1155. with the exception of the sheriff
of Maycomb County,
Copy !req
1156. have presented themselves
to you gentlemen, to this court,
Copy !req
1157. in the cynical confidence
Copy !req
1158. that their testimony
would not be doubted,
Copy !req
1159. confident that you gentlemen
would go along with them
Copy !req
1160. on the assumption,
Copy !req
1161. the evil assumption
that all Negroes lie,
Copy !req
1162. all Negroes are
basically immoral beings,
Copy !req
1163. all Negro men are not to be trusted
around our women.
Copy !req
1164. An assumption that one associates
with minds of their caliber
Copy !req
1165. and which is, in itself,
gentlemen, a lie
Copy !req
1166. which I do not need
to point out to you.
Copy !req
1167. And so,
Copy !req
1168. a quiet, humble,
respectable Negro
Copy !req
1169. who has had
the unmitigated temerity
Copy !req
1170. to feel sorry for a white woman
Copy !req
1171. has had to put his word
against two white people's.
Copy !req
1172. The defendant is not guilty,
Copy !req
1173. but somebody in
this courtroom is.
Copy !req
1174. Now, gentlemen,
Copy !req
1175. in this country,
Copy !req
1176. our courts are
the great levelers.
Copy !req
1177. In our courts,
Copy !req
1178. all men are created equal.
Copy !req
1179. I'm no idealist
Copy !req
1180. to believe firmly
in the integrity
Copy !req
1181. of our courts and
in our jury system.
Copy !req
1182. That's no ideal to me.
That is a living, working reality.
Copy !req
1183. I am confident that
you gentlemen will review
Copy !req
1184. without passion
Copy !req
1185. the evidence
that you have heard,
Copy !req
1186. come to a decision
Copy !req
1187. and restore this man
to his family.
Copy !req
1188. In the name of God,
Copy !req
1189. do your duty.
Copy !req
1190. In the name of God,
Copy !req
1191. believe Tom Robinson.
Copy !req
1192. How long has the jury
been out now, Reverend?
Copy !req
1193. Let's see.
Copy !req
1194. Almost two hours now.
Copy !req
1195. I think that's an awful good sign,
don't you?
Copy !req
1196. Court's now in session.
Everybody rise.
Copy !req
1197. Gentlemen of the jury,
have you reached a verdict?
Copy !req
1198. We have, Your Honor.
Copy !req
1199. Will the defendant
please rise and face the jury?
Copy !req
1200. What is your verdict?
Copy !req
1201. We find the defendant
guilty as charged.
Copy !req
1202. Gentlemen,
this jury is dismissed.
Copy !req
1203. Court's adjourned.
Copy !req
1204. I'll go to see Helen,
first thing tomorrow morning.
Copy !req
1205. I told her not to be disappointed,
we'd probably lose this one.
Copy !req
1206. Tom.
Copy !req
1207. Yes, Mr. Finch.
Copy !req
1208. Miss Jean Louise?
Copy !req
1209. Stand up.
Copy !req
1210. Your father's passing.
Copy !req
1211. Atticus.
Copy !req
1212. I'm sorry, Atticus.
Copy !req
1213. Thank you, Maudie.
Copy !req
1214. Atticus, can I see
you for a minute?
Copy !req
1215. Will you excuse me?
Copy !req
1216. Jem?
Copy !req
1217. Yes, ma'am.
Copy !req
1218. I don't know if it'll help,
Copy !req
1219. but I want to say this to you.
Copy !req
1220. There are some men in this world
Copy !req
1221. who were born to do
our unpleasant jobs for us.
Copy !req
1222. Your father's one of them.
Copy !req
1223. Oh, well.
Copy !req
1224. What's the matter, Atticus?
Copy !req
1225. Tom Robinson is dead.
Copy !req
1226. They were taking him to
Abbotsville for safekeeping.
Copy !req
1227. Tom broke loose and ran.
Copy !req
1228. The deputy
Copy !req
1229. called out to him to stop.
Copy !req
1230. Tom didn't stop.
Copy !req
1231. He shot at him to wound him
and missed his aim.
Copy !req
1232. Killed him.
Copy !req
1233. The deputy says,
Copy !req
1234. "Tom just ran
like a crazy man."
Copy !req
1235. The last thing I told him was not
to lose heart, that we'd ask for an appeal.
Copy !req
1236. We had such a good chance.
Copy !req
1237. We had more than a good chance.
Copy !req
1238. I have to go out
and tell his family.
Copy !req
1239. Would you look after
the children, Maudie?
Copy !req
1240. Atticus, you want me
to go with you?
Copy !req
1241. No, Son. I think I'd
better go up there alone.
Copy !req
1242. Atticus.
Copy !req
1243. I'm going with you.
Copy !req
1244. All right, Son.
Copy !req
1245. Hello, Mr. Finch.
I'm Spence, Tom's father.
Copy !req
1246. Hello, Spence.
Copy !req
1247. Is Helen here?
Copy !req
1248. Yes, sir.
She's inside, lying down, trying to get a little sleep.
Copy !req
1249. We've been talking about the appeal,
Mr. Finch.
Copy !req
1250. How long you think it will take?
Copy !req
1251. Spence...
Copy !req
1252. There isn't going
to be any appeal.
Copy !req
1253. Not now. Tom is dead.
Copy !req
1254. Dead?
Copy !req
1255. Helen.
Copy !req
1256. Boy,
Copy !req
1257. go inside and tell Atticus Finch
I said, "Come out here."
Copy !req
1258. Go on, boy.
Copy !req
1259. By October, things had settled down again.
Copy !req
1260. I still looked for Boo
every time I went by the Radley place.
Copy !req
1261. This night, my mind was
filled with Halloween.
Copy !req
1262. There was to be a pageant representing
our county's agricultural products.
Copy !req
1263. I was to be a ham.
Copy !req
1264. Jem said that he would escort me
to the school auditorium.
Copy !req
1265. Thus began our
longest journey together.
Copy !req
1266. Scout?
Copy !req
1267. Yeah?
Copy !req
1268. Will you come on?
Everybody's gone!
Copy !req
1269. I can't go home like this!
Copy !req
1270. I'm going. It's almost 10:00
and Atticus will be waiting for us.
Copy !req
1271. All right, I'm coming.
Copy !req
1272. But I feel like a fool,
walking home like this.
Copy !req
1273. It's not my fault
you lost your dress.
Copy !req
1274. I didn't lose it.
I just can't find it.
Copy !req
1275. Where are your shoes?
Copy !req
1276. I can't find them, either.
Copy !req
1277. You can get them tomorrow.
Copy !req
1278. But tomorrow is Sunday.
Copy !req
1279. You can get the janitor
to let you in. Come on.
Copy !req
1280. Here, Scout, let me hold on to you before
you break your neck.
Copy !req
1281. You don't have to hold me.
Copy !req
1282. Shh.
Copy !req
1283. What's the matter?
Copy !req
1284. Hush a minute, Scout.
Copy !req
1285. I thought I heard something.
Copy !req
1286. Ah!
Copy !req
1287. Come on.
Copy !req
1288. Wait.
Copy !req
1289. - Are you trying to scare me?
- Shh.
Copy !req
1290. You know I'm too old.
Copy !req
1291. Be quiet.
Copy !req
1292. I heard an old dog then.
Copy !req
1293. It's not that.
I hear it when we're walking along.
Copy !req
1294. When we stop,
I don't hear it anymore.
Copy !req
1295. Oh, yeah, my costume rustling.
Copy !req
1296. Halloween got you.
Copy !req
1297. I hear it now.
Copy !req
1298. I'll bet it's just old Cecil Jacobs
trying to scare us.
Copy !req
1299. Cecil Jacobs is a big wet hen!
Copy !req
1300. Come on.
Copy !req
1301. Run, Scout! Run, Scout!
Run, run!
Copy !req
1302. Scout! Scout!
Copy !req
1303. What happened?
Copy !req
1304. I swear I don't know.
I just don't know.
Copy !req
1305. Cal, you go and tell
Dr. Reynolds to come over.
Copy !req
1306. Yes, sir.
Copy !req
1307. You all right?
Copy !req
1308. Yes, sir.
Copy !req
1309. Are you sure?
Copy !req
1310. Yes, sir.
Copy !req
1311. Sheriff Tate, please.
Copy !req
1312. Atticus, is Jem dead?
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1313. No, he's unconscious.
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1314. We won't know how badly he's hurt
until the doctor gets here.
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1315. Heck, Atticus Finch.
Someone's been after my children.
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1316. He's got a bad break, so far as I can tell.
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1317. Like somebody tried
to wring his arm off.
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1318. I'll be right back, Atticus.
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1319. How's the boy, Doc?
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1320. He'll be all right.
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1321. Sheriff Tate.
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1322. What is it, Heck?
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1323. Bob Ewell's lying on the ground,
under that tree down yonder
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1324. with a kitchen knife
stuck up under his ribs.
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1325. He's dead, Mr. Finch.
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1326. You sure?
Yes, sir.
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1327. He's not gonna bother
these children anymore.
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1328. Miss Scout, do you think you could
tell us what happened?
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1329. I don't know.
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1330. All of a sudden somebody grabbed me,
knocked me down on the ground.
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1331. Jem found me then.
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1332. Then Mr. Ewell, I reckon,
grabbed him again, and Jem hollered.
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1333. Then somebody grabbed me.
Mr. Ewell, I guess.
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1334. Somebody grabbed him.
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1335. Then I heard someone
panting and coughing.
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1336. And I saw someone carrying Jem.
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1337. Who was it?
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1338. There he is, Mr. Tate.
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1339. He'll tell you his name.
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1340. Hey, Boo.
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1341. Miss Jean Louise,
Mr. Arthur Radley.
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1342. I believe he already knows you.
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1343. Heck, let's go out
on the front porch.
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1344. Would you like to say good night to Jem,
Mr. Arthur?
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1345. You can pet him, Mr. Arthur.
He's asleep.
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1346. You couldn't if he was awake, though.
He wouldn't let you.
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1347. Go ahead.
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1348. Come sit in
the swing, Mr. Arthur.
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1349. I guess that
the thing to do is...
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1350. Good Lord,
I must be losing my memory.
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1351. I can't remember
whether Jem is 12 or 13.
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1352. Anyway, it'll have to come
before the County court.
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1353. Of course, it is a clear-cut case
of self-defense.
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1354. I'll run down to the office...
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1355. Mr. Finch,
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1356. do you think Jem killed Bob Ewell?
Is that what you think?
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1357. Your boy never stabbed him.
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1358. Bob Ewell fell on his knife.
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1359. He killed himself.
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1360. There's a black man
dead for no reason
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1361. and now the man responsible
for it is dead.
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1362. Let the dead bury the dead this time,
Mr. Finch.
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1363. I never heard tell
it was against the law
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1364. for any citizen to do his utmost
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1365. to prevent a crime
from being committed,
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1366. which is exactly what he did.
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1367. But maybe you'll tell
me that it's my duty
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1368. to tell the town all about it,
not to hush it up.
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1369. You know what will happen then.
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1370. All the ladies in Maycomb,
including my wife,
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1371. will be knocking on his door
bringing angel food cakes.
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1372. To my way of thinking,
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1373. taking the one man who's done you and
this town a big service
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1374. and dragging him,
with his shy ways, into the limelight,
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1375. to me, that's a sin.
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1376. It's a sin and I'm not about
to have it on my head.
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1377. I may not be much,
Mr. Finch,
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1378. but I'm still
Sheriff of Maycomb County
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1379. and Bob Ewell fell on his knife.
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1380. Good night, sir.
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1381. Mr. Tate was right.
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1382. What do you mean?
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1383. It would be sort of like shooting
a mockingbird, wouldn't it?
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1384. Thank you, Arthur.
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1385. Thank you for my children.
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1386. Neighbors bring food with death
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1387. and flowers with sickness,
and little things in between.
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1388. Boo was our neighbor.
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1389. He gave us two soap dolls,
a broken watch and chain,
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1390. a knife
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1391. and our lives.
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1392. One time, Atticus said
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1393. you never really knew a man
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1394. until you stood in his shoes
and walked around in them.
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1395. Just standing on
the Radley porch was enough.
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1396. The summer that had begun
so long ago had ended
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1397. and another summer
had taken its place,
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1398. and a fall,
and Boo Radley had come out.
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1399. I was to think of
these days many times,
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1400. of Jem and Dill and Boo Radley
and Tom Robinson
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1401. and Atticus.
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1402. He would be in
Jem's room all night.
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1403. And he would be there
when Jem waked up in the morning.
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