francis
Do you agree with it is the question
Scout gets angry and punches Francis in the face for insulting her father. She defends Atticus and does not tolerate derogatory remarks about him.
Francis Hancock refers to his uncle Atticus as a "nigger-lover."
Francis Hancock is Aunt Alexandra's eight-year-old grandson (Jem's and Scout's cousin) in "To Kill a Mockingbird". He was the boy that got in the fight with Scout because he called Atticus a "n----- lover."
Francis is insulting Atticus. the whole scene is on page 110
black people lover
because her cousin Francis calls Atticus a "nigger-lover" and because Atticus told her and Jem to hold their heads high and ignore people who judge them but Scout snapped, and beat up Francis. plus, she was using foul language her uncle didnt like
he doesnt - he tells scout her daddy is a ni**er lover - she beats him up for it which is sad but kinda funny - she is not too sure why it is a bad thing to say but she says it sounds bad - of course when she asks atticus if he is indeed a ni**er lover he says 'of course i am honey' - cos he tries to show her there is no reason not to be. 'ni**er' wasnt SEEN as a massively offensive term in those days - atticus tells scout not to say it cos it is simply 'common'. Anyway, scout then gets a smacked bum from uncle jack for losing her temper - which also highlights atticus' good parenting skills cos he would never hit scout without finding out the full story - he never hits them at all actually.
He calls her racist
Francis called Atticus a nigger-lover, and said he's raising his kids the wrong way, letting them go wild and such, and that he's ruining the family.
Scout gets into a fight with Francis after he insults Atticus for defending Tom Robinson. The result is that Uncle Jack intervenes and punishes Scout for her behavior without fully understanding the situation.
Scout beats up Francis because he insulted her father, Atticus, by calling him a "n****r lover." This deeply offends Scout as she has a strong sense of loyalty and admiration towards her father, leading her to defend him despite being told not to.