Atticus And Miss Maudie Character Analysis

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Atticus and Miss Maudie make good neighbours for the Radley’s because they don’t try to interfere with the Radley’s life and have accepted and realized the way they live. Both Atticus and Miss Maudie are not judgemental. They both tell the children not to make assumptions about people. Atticus forbids Scout, Jem, and Dill from playing their game because it could be seen as rude and mocking. This shows Atticus’ respect for the Radley’s.

It could be inferred that the Ewell household is filthy. Scout describes Burris Ewell as the “filthiest” human she had ever seen. Scout also remarks, “His neck was dark grey, the backs of his hands were rusty, and his fingernails were black deep into the quick.” Another inference that could be made is that the Ewell children have to fend for themselves. Bob Ewell, the father, is a heavy drinker and spends his relief checks on green whiskey. Leaving the children “crying from hunger pains”.
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We learn that she lives in the small county of Maycomb, in Alabama, where everyone knows each other. Scout lives there with her father, brother, and maid. Scout’s mother passed away when she was two. Her father, Atticus, is a lawyer and her brother, Jem, seems to be her best friend. The family maid, Calpurnia, is the closest thing to a mother figure Scout has. Scout seems to be a tomboy. Her friends, Jem and Dill, are boys and she is quite confident around