because she is only nin e and she was talking to Walter cunnin ham and she was taking tio him about his son and she said my dad told me if someone was paying attention then talk to them about something there untgerested in
Beau
Scout's a girl, not a "he". At the beginning of the book, she's 6 years old; but of course she's grown up and is 8, I think, by the end of the book.
he doent listen to both sides of the story
The countryman who Scout does not recognize is actually Boo Radley. He is a reclusive neighbor who has been living next door to Scout and her family for years but rarely comes out of his house. Scout only realizes his true identity later in the story.
Scout
Scout misses her que.
Scout says that "Atticus was feeble". Do you think that this is her view as she tells the story or her view when she was younger? Does she still think this after the events recorded in this chapter?
Scout's mother is already dead before the story begins.
Aunt Alexandra, her husband, and francis. im not sure but i think there grandmother!
Basically Scout taught uncle Jack to hear both sides of the story before coming to a conclusion.
Scout dresses up as ham in the play because her teacher, Miss Caroline, misunderstood Scout's request to be a ham during the school's pageant. Scout was actually supposed to be a ham, but Miss Caroline thought she wanted to dress up as one. This misunderstanding leads to a humorous moment in the story.
Scout thinks she stepped on a wire in the dark.