Scout is feeling isolated since Jem and Dill's connection seems to increase further. So she meets up with one of the neighbors, Miss Maudie Atkinson. Miss Maudie is a brilliant baker and a garden lover, and she, too, understands the condition inside the town. she tells Scout that Boo Radley is still alive and also explains that he was a pleasant guy before the disparaging stories. Meanwhile, Jem and Phill resolve to uncover the riddle by hanging a letter for Boo Radley to a fishing rod and attempting to throw it through the window. Atticus observes this and scolds the youngsters, instructing them to stop pestering the Radley inhabitants.
Dill asks Scout to marry him.
Small-town living causes rumors to spread faster.
Youth and immaturity are apparent in a child's viewpoint.
Jem is reprimanded at the most.
The lads are busted by Atticus.
Jem and Dill plot to leave a message to Boo Radley.
Small-town living has familiar, local companions.
Scout spends the day at Miss Maudie's residence.
Jem and Dill arrange to send a message to Boo Radley
She spoke of deforestation, chemicals in the air, the waste and greed in our society, and the wanton destruction of animal and plant species that can never be brought back to life again. Her speech wants to tell the audience the bad effects of human activities polluting the atmosphere.