Boo is thought to a crazy guy that tries to kill people but really he is afraid that people dont like him
People can tell all kinds of stories about other people. It doesn't mean they are true or accurate. Harper Lee shows how children do not always have all the details--or the right understanding about a person or situation.
In Harper Lee's novel "To Kill a Mockingbird," Scout and Jem's summertime boundaries were to go no further than the Radley Place during the day. At night, they were not allowed to cross the school grounds or venture near the Radley Place.
Mrs. Dubose insults Atticus in front of Jem on pages 135-136 in the book "To Kill a Mockingbird" by Harper Lee.
This line was said by Mrs. Dubose to Scout Finch in the novel "To Kill a Mockingbird" by Harper Lee. Mrs. Dubose was an elderly woman known for her harsh and racist remarks.
She wants to see and meet and talk to Boo Radley at least once.
Harper Lee uses an ugly description of Mrs. Dubose to emphasize her mean and cantankerous personality. By highlighting her physical appearance as harsh and unpleasant, Lee helps to create a vivid and memorable image of Mrs. Dubose as a formidable and challenging character in the story.
She teaches the kids what real courage is.
Jem and Scout say that Mrs. Dubose is the meanest woman who ever lived in Harper Lee's novel "To Kill a Mockingbird".
Dill, Jem, Simon Finch, Atticus, John Hale Finch, Calpurnia, Mrs. Henry Lafayette Dubose, Mr. Radley, Boo Radley, Mrs. Radley, Mr. Conner, Miss Stephanie Crawford, Nathan Radley, and Scout are introduced in the first chapter.
In "To Kill a Mockingbird," the children also avoid the Dubose house. Mrs. Dubose is known for her mean and racist behavior, which makes the children uncomfortable. Scout and Jem often walk on the other side of the street to avoid encountering her.
This line is from the novel "To Kill a Mockingbird" by Harper Lee. It is spoken by Atticus Finch to Mrs. Dubose when he is escorting his children, Scout and Jem, past her house.
The boundaries were between Mrs. Henry Lafayette Dubose's house (two doors north of the Finchs) and the Radley house (three doors south)