Name: Class: To Kill a Mockingbird Character Recognition Directions: Match the following characters with their correct descriptions using the word bank. Jean Louise Finch Atticus Finch Calpurnia Arthur Radley Mayella Ewell Jeremy Atticus Bob Ewell Mrs. Dubose Aunt Alexandra Tom Robinson Charles Baker Tim Johnson Nathan Radley Heck Tate Mr. Underwood Miss Maudie Atkinson Zeebo Caroline Fisher Dolphus Raymond Walter Cunningham 1. The garbage man and son of Calpurnia. 2. The narrator and protagonist of the novel. 3. A short boy from Mississippi who ran away and likes to tell tall tales. 4. The brother of Boo. He also shoots at Jem. 5. Moves in with the Finch family to help Scout have a feminine influence. 6. The hired help whom lives with the Finch family. She takes Scout and Jem to her church. 7. The rabid dog that Atticus shoots. 8. The colored man who is accused of raping a white girl. 9. The county sheriff.
10. Jem and Scout s father; the lawyer who defends the colored man. 11. Scout s first teacher 12. This character leaves surprises for Scout and Jem in a tree. 13. Loves working in her garden more than being inside her house. 14. Fools the town into thinking he is drunk all the time so that he can continue to live with his colored wife and mixed children. 15. Spits in Atticus face and threatens him after the trial. 16. The narrator s brother, also known as Jem. 17. The morphine addict who Jem reads to; she also dies. 18. The person who claimed to be raped. 19. The main editor of the Tribune; he was also hiding in the Tribune office to protect Atticus and the accused man from a mob. 20. Scout beats this person up and then Jem invites him to have dinner with them.
Name: To Kill A Mockingbird Harper Lee Class: 49 To Kill a Mockingbird Quote Recognition Directions: Match the following characters with the correct quote from the book. (Hint: Some of the characters will be used more than once; some won t be used at all!) Jem Scout Tom Robinson Reverend Sykes Dill Calpurnia Miss Maudie Dolphus Raymond Atticus Aunt Alexandra 1. Now what if I talked white-folks talk at church, and with my neighbors? They d think I was puttin on airs to beat Moses. 2. You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point or view... until you climb into his skin and walk around in it. 3. Because he is trash, that s why you can t play with him. I ll not have you around him, picking up his habits and learning Lord-know-what. You re enough of a problem to your father as it is. 4. I don t care one speck. It ain t right, somehow it ain t right to do em that way. Hasn t anybody got any business talkin like that it just makes me sick. 5. It ain t honest but it s mighty helpful to folks. Secretly, Miss Finch, I m not much of a drinker, but you see the could never, never understand that I lived like I do because that s the way I want to live.
6. Naw, Jem, I think there s just one kind of folks. Folks. 7. I just thought you d like to know I can read. You got anything needs readin I can do it. 8. I wanted you to see what real courage is, instead of getting the idea that courage is a man with a gun in his hand. It s when you know you re licked before you begin but you begin anyway and you see it through no matter what. 9. Doesn t make it right You just can t convict a man on evidence like that you can t. 10. but before I can live with other folks I ve got to live with myself. The one thing that doesn t abide by majority rule is a person s conscience.
To Kill a Mockingbird Answers Character Recognition 1. Zeebo 2. Jean Louise Finch 3. Charles Baker Harris 4. Nathan Radley 5. Aunt Alexandra 6. Calpurnia 7. Tim Johnson 8. Tom Robinson 9. Heck Tate 10. Atticus Finch 11. Miss Caroline Fisher 12. Arthur Radley 13. Maude Atkinson 14. Dolphus Raymond 15. Bob Ewell 16. Jeremy A. Finch 17. Mrs. Dubose 18. Mayella Ewell 19. Mr. Underwood 20. Walter Cunningham Quote Identification 1. Calpurnia 2. Atticus 3. Aunt Alexandra 4. Dill 5. Dolphus Raymond 6. Scout 7. Dill 8. Atticus 9. Jem 10. Atticus Possible Themes: Overcoming prejudice (racial, social class, and gender roles). Innocence Courage Perspective Stereotypes Hypocrisy The power of one