13Sep

To Kill a Mockingbird Chapter 12 Summary

To Kill a Mockingbird Chapter 12 Summary

To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee

Setting

Chapter 12 of To Kill a Mockingbird mainly takes place in the church that the Finches' housekeeper Calpurnia attends.

Main Characters

Scout- she is originally known as jean Louise finch but uses the nickname scout. Scout is the daughter of Atticus finch and is nearly six years old when the story begins. She is a tomboy, eager, inquisitive and observant.

Jem- Jeremy Atticus finch, also known as Jem is scout’s older brother who is 10 as the novel begins. He is wildly imaginative and as curious as a scout.

Calpurnia- she has been a cook at the finch house since Jem was born. She becomes a mother figure to Jem and scout after the death of their mother.

Dill- he is also known as Charles Baker Harris and is the six-year-old nephew of Rachel Haverford, the next door neighbor of the finches’.

Atticus- Atticus finch is a lawyer in Maycomb, Alabama. He is a widowed father to Jem and scout.

Tom Robinson- he is the black man accused of raping Mayella Ewell.

Reverend Sykes – he is the reverend of First Purchase, the black church in Maycomb.

Zeebo – he is Calpurnia’s adult son and the garbage collector in town.

Helen Robinson – she is Tom Robinson’s wife.

Aunt Alexandra – she is Atticus’s sister. She is married, but Scout insists that her husband is not worth mentioning.

Plot Summary

Seemingly overnight after Mrs. Dubose’s death, Jem becomes moody and starts telling Scout what to do, including acting like a proper girl. Calpurnia assures Scout that Jem is just growing up and invites Scout to join her in the kitchen. Things look bright for a while, and Scout starts to suspect that there is skill involved with being a girl. However, she receives a letter from Dill early in the summer, which says that Dill has to stay in Mississippi with his new father. He promises to return and marry Scout, which is little comfort for her, Dill is summer. To make matters worse, Atticus leaves for two weeks to attend an emergency legislative session. One morning, Scout and Jem find a cartoon in the paper that depicts Atticus chained to a desk. Jem tells Scout that it is about Atticus doing things that nobody else will do.

Scout heads for the kitchen. Calpurnia asks what to do about church this week. Scout points out that Atticus left collection for them and they have not misbehaved in the church in years, but Calpurnia invites Scout and Jem to come to her church instead. That night she bathes Scout roughly and supervises Jem. In the morning, Scout puts on her heavily starched dress. Calpurnia leads them to First Purchase, the black church, named because freed slaves bought it with their first earnings. Most people part respectfully and let Calpurnia lead Scout and Jem to the steps, but one woman, Lula, asks why Calpurnia has white children. Jem and Scout want to leave, but the rest of the congregation shuts Lula out and assures the children that they are welcome

Reverend Sykes leads Calpurnia, Scout, and Jem to the front pew. Calpurnia gives dimes to Scout and Jem, telling them to keep theirs, and Scout asks where the hymnbooks are. Calpurnia shushes her. Reverend Sykes makes announcements and says that the collection this week will go to Helen, Tom Robinson’s wife. Zeebo comes to the front of the church to lead the first hymn. Scout can’t help herself and asks how they’re going to sing without books, but Zeebo leads the congregation in a call-and-response of the hymn. The sermon is forthright and familiar to Scout, but she finds it odd that people go to the front to offer their collection. Reverend Sykes counts it and says they need to reach $10 before people can leave. Jem takes his and Scout’s dimes up, and finally, they reach $10.

Outside, Jem and Scout chat with Reverend Sykes. He mentions that Atticus is very kind and Scout asks why they’re taking a collection for Helen. He explains that Helen cannot take her children to work, which seems odd to Scout. Reverend Sykes says that Helen cannot find work as Calpurnia leads her away. Scout peppers Calpurnia with questions and learns that Tom is in jail because Bob Ewell accused him of raping his daughter. Scout remembers how Atticus called the Ewells trash and asks what rape is. Calpurnia will not say. Jem asks about the way they sing hymns and Calpurnia explains that most of the congregation is illiterate. She says that Miss Maudie’s aunt taught her to read. Calpurnia taught Zeebo from a book that Atticus’s father gave her.

Jem comments that this is why Calpurnia does not talk like the other black people, and Scout realizes that she is never thought of Calpurnia leading a double life and speaking two languages. She asks why Calpurnia speaks incorrectly to black people when she knows it is wrong. Calpurnia points out that she is black and notes that she needs to speak that way to make people feel comfortable. Scout asks if she can visit Calpurnia at her house sometime, and Calpurnia insists she would be glad to have her. Jem points Scout’s attention to the porch. She looks first at the Radley porch but then sees Aunt Alexandra on their porch

Themes

  1. Growth. Scout, Dill, and Jem grow up both physically and mentally. They begin the novel with a firm and uncomplicated idea of what is good and what is bad, but by the end of the novel, they have all lost their innocence and have come to a more complex understanding of how people and the world work.
  2. Prejudice. Prejudice is shown in the novel by the many people living in Maycomb being racists and prejudiced against black people.

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