Significant events in chapter two;
- dill leaves maycomb to go to meridian
- Scout goes to school and dislikes her teacher ms. Caroline fisher
- ms Caroline fisher is a character who is narrow minded as she tries to "undo the damage" of Atticus teaching scout how to read
Significant events in chapter 3;
- scout invites Walter Cunningham to her house to eat because he is poor and has nothing to eat
- Walter then proceeds to pour a bottle of syrup onto his vegetables; the syrup is a symbol; Syrup is sweet and Walter is poor, implying that poor people miss out on the sweeter, more finer highs in life and he is attempting to cover his bland, boring life with something sweeter
Hope this helps;)
POINT OF VIEW · The narrator speaks in the first person, noting his observations of the war and his brother's involvement
TONE · Matter-of-fact; conversational; sometimes childish
TENSE · Past
SETTING (TIME) · 1775–1779; epilogue, 1826
SETTING (PLACE)<span> · Redding, Connecticut and nearby areas
</span>TIME AND PLACE WRITTEN<span> · Early 1970s, United States
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Wedding day of any man in the world is the day when everything goes wrong.
“How could you have the heart to put your own child out among strangers?”