When determining the difference between facts and opinions (or gossip), consider the source and the number of people through which the "facts" are passed before believing anything. For example, Scout receives information abut the Radleys from Jem, who got his information from Stephanie Crawford, who got her information from who knows where from who knows how long ago. When people play "the telephone game," facts are sure to get watered down, lost in translation, and skewed at best. But when a person obtains information from a primary source, such as a witness or participant to an event, the facts are more likely to remain true. One must also decipher the difference between how someone feels about an event or topic, and cold, hard facts.
First of all, as mentioned above, Stephanie Crawford is known to be the community gossip. Gossips pass information around to show that they are important and to get attention. Sometimes they can jazz up a story simply to feel more important and so people will want to listen to them. What Stephanie Crawford can't do is change court documents. For instance, Scout mentions an episode when Boo Radley was younger and out messing around with some Cunninghams one night. They were driving around the square backwards and an officer, Mr. Connor, stopped them. They locked the officer in the court's outhouse, so charges were brought against them. The boys appeared before a judge and were sentenced to go to an engineering school in Auburn. The Cunninghams went and Boo Radley did not on account of his father thinking it was a disgrace. All of these facts were obtained through Stephanie Crawford, but could also be challenged if anyone asked for copies of the case from the public records department.
However, Stephanie Crawford goes on to say that in an effort to keep Boo Radley out of jail, Mr. Radley claimed he would never let anything like that happen again if the county released his son to him. Scout explains what happened next as follows:
"Nobody knew what form of intimidation Mr. Radley employed to keep Boo out of sight, but Jem figured that Mr. Radley kept him chained to the best most of the time. Atticus said no, it wasn't that sort of thing, that there were other ways of making people into ghosts" (11).
Now within this passage, Jem is making up speculative stories that could be passed around town as fact. Luckily, Atticus jumps in to correct Jem's theory but ends it ambiguously. So the facts seem to state that Boo Radley got into some trouble and had to be on house arrest by his father. The gossip starts when people start to speculate how Mr. Radley has kept Boo in the house for so many years.
A lot of gossip, though, turns into creepy legends over time and some of the people of the community respond superstitiously. For example, when Mr. Radley passed by Scout and Calpurnia one time, Cal said, "There goes the meanest man ever God blew breath into," and then she spits into the yard (12). Scout also explains that no one from the black community will walk past the Radley house in the dark and kids in the school yard won't eat the nuts that fall from the Radley's trees for fear of death. Anything outrageous and unproven by court documents, scientific research or a primary witness should not be taken as truth.
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