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Atticus Justify Their Actions In To Kill A Mockingbird

537 Words3 Pages
At the start of To Kill a Mockingbird, Scout is young and naive, and has a hard time understanding people’s intentions. Over the course of the book, Scout grows up and starts understanding more about people. Many of the major events in To Kill a Mockingbird show the process of Scout beginning to understand how people think and how they justify their actions in a way that only a lawyer's child can. In part one of the novel, Scout learns more about her father and how he thinks. When Atticus reluctantly shoots the mad dog, Scout doesn’t understand why Atticus doesn’t take pride in his skill with guns. When she asked Miss Maudie why he never hunted, she explained to Scout that Atticus didn’t want to use the unfair advantage of a gun unless
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