I think that Atticus knew how to raise his children and there was no need of his sister Alexandra. Although Scout was not the perfect lady and her behaviour was similarly with a boy, she and her brother entered in Atticus world, in the law world with a surprisingly confidence, perseverence and conceive of everything was happening in Tom's process. They were not just curious, they took part at this event as all of these were happening to one member of their own family; they were raised by their father not to be discriminate, but to be fair and honest, to agree the multitude of differences that surrounded them. I loved to read the sequences in which Scout and Jem participated with their body and their entire soul to that process, they were so attentive to every move, question, replique, answear given by those who were implied in the judgement. The curiosity of children to see their neighbour Boo Radley was satisfied to the end of the book, he was the one who saved the children's live. Since Dill came in Maycomb on summer vacation, they have many tentatives to aquaintance, but all of them ended with no result, except those presents that Boo Radley let for them in the tree's hollow. In that evening when Scout and Jem returned home from the Halloween play, they were attacked by Ewell, the one who promised that he will kill Atticus, he tryed to kill Atticus children, fortunatelly he did not managed, Jem got pretty hurt, but Scout had now the chance to meet Radley. The man that were looking for years, get out from his house now, with a single purpose, to save his neighbours.
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