1 We brought him home for dinner one time.
To Kill a Mockingbird By Harper LeeContext In PART 2: Chapter 15 2 "Come on home to dinner with us, Walter," he said.
To Kill a Mockingbird By Harper LeeContext In PART 1: Chapter 3 3 After dinner, we stopped by for Dill and went to town.
To Kill a Mockingbird By Harper LeeContext In PART 2: Chapter 16 4 "But he's gone and drowned his dinner in syrup," I protested.
To Kill a Mockingbird By Harper LeeContext In PART 1: Chapter 3 5 When Atticus came home to dinner he found me crouched down aiming across the street.
To Kill a Mockingbird By Harper LeeContext In PART 1: Chapter 10 6 When we went home for dinner Jem bolted his food, ran to the porch and stood on the steps.
To Kill a Mockingbird By Harper LeeContext In PART 1: Chapter 7 7 We could not wait for Atticus to come home for dinner, but called and said we had a big surprise for him.
To Kill a Mockingbird By Harper LeeContext In PART 1: Chapter 8 8 We held off until noon, when Atticus came home to dinner and said they'd spent the morning picking the jury.
To Kill a Mockingbird By Harper LeeContext In PART 2: Chapter 16 9 At Christmas dinner, I sat at the little table in the diningroom; Jem and Francis sat with the adults at the dining table.
To Kill a Mockingbird By Harper LeeContext In PART 1: Chapter 9 10 I retrieved my plate and finished dinner in the kitchen, thankful, though, that I was spared the humiliation of facing them again.
To Kill a Mockingbird By Harper LeeContext In PART 1: Chapter 3 11 "Soon's school starts I'm gonna ask Walter home to dinner," I planned, having forgotten my private resolve to beat him up the next time I saw him.
To Kill a Mockingbird By Harper LeeContext In PART 2: Chapter 23 12 Atticus would flee to his office directly after dinner, where if we sometimes looked in on him, we would find him sitting back in his swivel chair reading.
To Kill a Mockingbird By Harper LeeContext In PART 2: Chapter 15 13 But her cooking made up for everything: three kinds of meat, summer vegetables from her pantry shelves; peach pickles, two kinds of cake and ambrosia constituted a modest Christmas dinner.
To Kill a Mockingbird By Harper LeeContext In PART 1: Chapter 9 14 In long equity hearings, especially after dinner, he gave the impression of dozing, an impression dispelled forever when a lawyer once deliberately pushed a pile of books to the floor in a desperate effort to wake him up.
To Kill a Mockingbird By Harper LeeContext In PART 2: Chapter 16