At the End of Chapter 2 page 22
The filthiest person Scout had ever seen in "To Kill a Mockingbird" was Burris Ewell, a member of the Ewell family who only attended the first day of school every year and was described as unkempt and covered in dirt.
Scout rubbed Walter Cunningham's nose in the dirt to teach him a lesson about making her start a fight with him.
He makes it with dirt, and covers it with snow.
In "To Kill a Mockingbird," the sentence with "procured" is: "Boo Radley's father had learned of the contact between his son and the children, he had quickly, quietly, and efficiently procured a rowboat for them."
Burris Ewell had to go home to wash out the cooties and dirt from his hair. He was described as a very dirty and unkempt boy in the novel "To Kill a Mockingbird".
Jem stopped her.
The quotation from the novel is "just fell down in the dirt. Just fell down in the dirt, like a giant with a big foot just came along and stepped on her... Like you'd step on an ant." and is referring to Helen Robinson.
Scout feels Walter is of a lower social class than she is. She mistreats him because he is poorer than she is. Scout fells that Walter is unequal to her. also she questions on why she rubbed his nose in the dirt. Scout feels Walter is of a lower social class than she is. She mistreats him because he is poorer than she is. Scout fells that Walter is unequal to her. also she questions on why she rubbed his nose in the dirt.
Oh, dude, Scout is a little rebel, isn't she? She commits the heinous crimes of fighting, swearing, and impersonating a ham. I mean, who hasn't wanted to pretend to be a delicious cured meat at least once in their life, right? But hey, at least she's got spunk!
In Harper Lee's novel "To Kill a Mockingbird," Barker's Eddy is a riverbank area near the Finch family's property in Maycomb, Alabama. It is mentioned in Chapter 9 when Atticus Finch gives his children an air-rifle and instructs them not to shoot at mockingbirds or any other living creatures in Barker's Eddy. This location serves as a setting for the children's adventures and life lessons throughout the novel.
She said he made her start out on the wrong foot
The only way that eating dirt can kill you is if it contains artificial or naturally occurring poisons. Dirt itself is completely harmless, unless you eat enough to cause a bowel obstruction.