To Kill a Mockingbird
To Kill a Mockingbird
by Harper Lee

To Kill a Mockingbird Chapter 25 Summary

  • September has arrived, but autumn coolness hasn’t, so Scout and Jem are still sleeping out on the back porch.
  • There Scout finds a roly-poly bug, and amuses herself by poking it so it rolls up, waiting for it to unroll and start walking, then poking it again.
  • She’s about to squish it when Jem stops her, and she makes fun of him for being so sympathetic towards bugs.
  • Scout thinks that Jem is the one who’s getting more like a girl, not her.
  • Dill has gone back to Meridian for the school year, and thinking about Dill sends Scout onto thinking about what Dill told her before he left town.
  • Cue memory flashback: On the day of the missionary tea, Jem and Dill had been walking back from the swimming hole trying to hitch a ride when they saw Atticus driving somewhere with Calpurnia.
  • Atticus wanted them to try to get another ride since he wasn’t going to go home for a while, but the boys convinced him to let them come with him.
  • As they drove to the Robinson house, Atticus told them what had happened to Tom.
  • When they arrived, Mrs. Robinson was out, so one of her kids went to bring her back.
  • When Mrs. Robinson saw that Atticus had bad news, she fainted.
  • Atticus and Calpurnia brought Mrs. Robinson into the house and stayed with her for some time, while the boys waited in the car as Atticus had asked them to do.
  • Calpurnia stayed with the Robinson while Atticus drove the boys home.
  • As they passed the Ewell place, they heard voices shouting at them, but Dill couldn’t tell what they were saying. And that’s the end of Dill’s story of that day.
  • Tom’s death is the hot topic in Maycomb gossip for a few days, mostly as a way to reinforce pre-existing stereotypes as to the foolishness of black people.
  • The story seems well on its way to dying a quick death until Mr. Underwood comes out with an editorial on the topic in The Maycomb Tribune – since it’s the only paper in town, he can say whatever he want and not lose subscribers or advertising, though he doesn’t really care if he does.
  • Mr. Underwood is furious and he’s not going to take it anymore, so he’s written a blistering editorial about how even though on the surface it seemed that Tom had due process of law, internal racism meant that he was doomed from the moment Mayella screamed.
  • Miss Stephanie, ever the joyful bearer of bad news, tells Aunt Alexandra and Jem that when Mr. Ewell heard of Tom’s death, he said one down, two to go.
  • Jem passes this on to Scout, but tells her not to worry, and also, under pain of serious silent treatment from him, not to even hint that she knows what Ewell said to Atticus.

Chapter 26
Chapter 24