's opinion of
Arthur Radley moves from believing that he is a malicious ghost to finding him to be a hero, a
kind man, and a friend.
As narrator, Scout introduces the reader to the
neighborhood and describes the Radley house as being "inhabited by an unknown entity the
mere description of whom was enough to make us behave for days on end." She adds that
inside the house there lives "a malevolent phantom." Supposedly he sneaks around at
night when there is no moon and peeps into windows. He has not been out of the house for fifteen
years since he got into trouble, and his father did not...
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