1 We generally get the juries we deserve.
To Kill a Mockingbird By Harper LeeContext In PART 2: Chapter 23 2 As a rule, a recess meant a general exodus, but today people weren't moving.
To Kill a Mockingbird By Harper LeeContext In PART 2: Chapter 18 3 Atticus said naming people after Confederate generals made slow steady drinkers.
To Kill a Mockingbird By Harper LeeContext In PART 2: Chapter 16 4 Jem, who hadn't been near Miss Maudie's scuppernong arbor since last summer, and who knew Miss Maudie wouldn't tell Atticus if he had, issued a general denial.
To Kill a Mockingbird By Harper LeeContext In PART 1: Chapter 11 5 For some reason, my first year of school had wrought a great change in our relationship: Calpurnia's tyranny, unfairness, and meddling in my business had faded to gentle grumblings of general disapproval.
To Kill a Mockingbird By Harper LeeContext In PART 1: Chapter 4 6 As the county went by us, Jem gave Dill the histories and general attitudes of the more prominent figures: Mr. Tensaw Jones voted the straight Prohibition ticket; Miss Emily Davis dipped snuff in private; Mr. Byron Waller could play the violin; Mr. Jake Slade was cutting his third set of teeth.
To Kill a Mockingbird By Harper LeeContext In PART 2: Chapter 16 7 The cabin's plank walls were supplemented with sheets of corrugated iron, its roof shingled with tin cans hammered flat, so only its general shape suggested its original design: square, with four tiny rooms opening onto a shotgun hall, the cabin rested uneasily upon four irregular lumps of limestone.
To Kill a Mockingbird By Harper LeeContext In PART 2: Chapter 17 8 People generally see what they look for, and hear what they listen for, and they have the right to subject their children to it, but I can assure you of one thing: you will receive what you see and hear in silence or you will leave this courtroom, but you won't leave it until the whole boiling of you come before me on contempt charges.
To Kill a Mockingbird By Harper LeeContext In PART 2: Chapter 17