Table of Contents
- 1 Why did Miss Maudie invite the kids for cake?
- 2 What does Miss Maudie explain to the kids after the trial?
- 3 What was the significance of Miss Maudie having two small cakes and one larger one?
- 4 What did Miss Maudie do for the children to make them feel better the morning after the trial?
- 5 What did Miss Maudie do when she baked a cake?
- 6 Why did Maudie give JEM a big cake?
Why did Miss Maudie invite the kids for cake?
Miss Maudie invited the children in for cake on the day after the trial because she is recognizing Jem’s movement from adolescence to adulthood with the cakes. She cuts him a slice from the larger cake–the cake which is a coming of age moment for him.
Does Miss Maudie bake cakes for the kids?
Miss Maudie is one of the nicest and most sensitive people in the whole novel. In many ways she is the female version of Atticus – wise, deliberate, and kind. She baked cakes for the children – Jem, Scout, and Dill. She made the best cakes in the neighborhood.
Who does Mrs Maudie give cake to after the trial?
Miss Maudie usually makes three small cakes for Jem, Scout, and Dill. After the trial, she makes two small cakes for Scout and Dill and cuts Jem a piece from the adult cake, symbolizing that he is growing up.
What does Miss Maudie explain to the kids after the trial?
Following the trial, Miss Maudie shows her support for Atticus and his children by baking Jem and Scout cakes and offering them words of encouragement. Although Atticus lost the case, Miss Maudie says, “And I thought to myself, well, we’re making a step—it’s just a baby-step, but it’s a step” (Lee, 219).
What was the significance of Miss Maudie cakes?
What was the significance of Maudie’s two little cakes and one large one? Maudie had two little cakes for Scout and Dill, but Jem got a slice from the big cake. This was Maudie’s symbolic way of saying that she accepted Jem as a young man instead of a boy.
What does Miss Maudie tell Jem after trial?
While the kids’ mouths are full, Maudie takes a moment to tell Jem that Atticus is a man who is on earth “to do our unpleasant jobs for us” (215). In a way, she is saying that Atticus is a hero. After the trial, Jem is disillusioned with the outcome. Miss Maudie defends the town and its people.
What was the significance of Miss Maudie having two small cakes and one larger one?
Does Miss Maudie think that it is an accident that Atticus was appointed by the judge to defend Tom Robinson?
Does Miss Maudie think that it is an accident that Atticus was appointed by the judge to defend Tom Robinson? No. Judge purposely chose Atticus becuase usually a new, beginning lawyer for this type of case.
What makes Miss Maudie hopeful after the trial and why?
Despite Tom’s wrongful conviction, Miss Maudie is able to see the many positives surrounding the case and believes that her prejudiced community is making small steps in the right direction towards racial equality. Chapter 22 of To Kill a Mockingbird deals with the aftermath of the Tom Robinson trial.
What did Miss Maudie do for the children to make them feel better the morning after the trial?
Miss Maudie rescues the children by inviting them in for some cake. Jem complains that his illusions about Maycomb have been shattered: he thought that these people were the best in the world, but, having seen the trial, he doesn’t think so anymore.
What does Miss Stephanie tell the children has happened?
Miss Stephanie tells them that Bob Ewell stopped Atticus at the post office corner, spat in his face, and told him that he would get back at him for what Atticus did to him at the trial if it took him the rest of his life.
What causes Miss Maudie to say?
The main aspect of the Tom Robinson case that causes Miss Maudie to say they are taking a “baby-step” in the right direction is the fact that it took the jury so long to convict Robinson—several hours rather than several minutes, as would be usual in such a case.
What did Miss Maudie do when she baked a cake?
When Miss Maudie baked a cake, she also would bake three little cakes, one for each of the children. It was just another way that Maudie communicated her love and respect for them, even though they were “just kids.” When Jem grew older, the time came when Miss Maudie baked only two little cakes, one for Scout and one for Dill.
What did Miss Maudie do after the trial?
Following the trial, Miss Maudie shows her support for Atticus and his children by baking Jem and Scout cakes and offering them words of encouragement. Unlike the majority of the prejudiced citizens in Maycomb, Miss Maudie does not attend the trial.
How does Miss Maudie support Atticus and his children?
Following the trial, Miss Maudie shows her support for Atticus and his children by baking Jem and Scout cakes and offering them words of encouragement. Unlike the majority of the prejudiced citizens in Maycomb, Miss Maudie does not attend the trial. She also refuses to gossip about Tom’s case and unobtrusively acknowledges its importance.
Why did Maudie give JEM a big cake?
Jem’s dessert came from the big cake, Maudie’s way of recognizing that he was no longer a child. It was not by accident that Maudie made this significant change the morning after Tom Robinson had been convicted. She knew how crushed Jem especially had been by this injustice.