Something about how Atticus was a dad. AND Mr.Cunningham had a innocent feeling for the kids.. and they fanned out. Hope this helped!
Atticus Finch, the father of Scout and Jem, persuaded the lynching party to leave by using persuasion and reason. He confronted the men with dignity and calmness, appealing to their sense of decency and justice to prevent them from harming Tom Robinson.
Scout Finch took her dad's advice and talked to them about what they liked until they gave up and went home.
They were disbanded once Scout recognized them and used their first names, and made them embarrassed.
The men finally left because of the dude with a gun that lives in the news paper house across from the jail house. And the dad wasn't going to leave no matter what the others where saying
The crowd was gathering to view the lynching when Scout recognized one of the men in the crowd and starting questioning him, he was so ashamed that he caused the crowd to leave.
Scout
Jean Louis Finch
In To Kill a Mockingbird, the lynching party is composed of a group of men who come to the jailhouse in Maycomb intent on harming Tom Robinson. They are influenced by racism and prejudice, and ultimately thwarted by Atticus Finch's moral stance.
Sheriff of Cochise - 1956 Lynching Party 1-19 was released on: USA: 1 February 1957
It wasn't easy, but he finally persuaded her to come to the party. The boy persuaded his mother to buy him a dog. Persuaded by public opinion, the mayor agreed to reduce the city budget.
Click your character and click leave party
His party supported equal rights for Black people
Make an excuse and leave, or just leave.
Yes. The party will continue without you.
A short story about a young boy witnessing a lynching, ñA Party Down at the Squareî, is the work of author Ralph Ellison that was first published in 1997, three years after his death. It describes the details of the lynching of a black man through the eyes of a young white boy from Cincinnati, Ohio. Although there are other catastrophic events happening, (a thunderstorm, an airplane crashes through electric power lines, a young woman is electrocuted), the most exciting thing to the town�s citizens is the lynching.
The ladies at the tea party in "To Kill a Mockingbird" discuss the trial of Tom Robinson with a mix of curiosity and prejudice. They express their biased opinions and make racist remarks, showing the deeply ingrained racism and discrimination in the community.
Scout diffuses the tense situation at the jail by innocently engaging in conversation with one of the men who is part of the lynch mob. She reminds him of his humanity and individuality, which prompts the other men to eventually leave to avoid causing any harm in front of a young child. This shows the power of innocence and compassion to disrupt violence and bring about change.
Scout plays on the emotions of the lynchers, making them feel like individuals, breaking up their "gang" feeling.