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Examples Of Imagery In To Kill A Mockingbird

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Examples Of Imagery In To Kill A Mockingbird
In this passage from page 203 of the novel To Kill a Mockingbird, Harper Lee uses literal and figurative imagery to create a frightening mood as the Finches confront an angry lynch mob. Scout describes the angry lynch mob as “dark smelly bodies”(203) as she was trying to get to Atticus. The image of “dark smelly bodies”(203) conveys a sense of olfaction, because Scout shows that the mob didn’t seem like actual people because she just calls them bodies, detaching them from their humanity. Scout also describes the olfaction of the jail as “a smell of stale whiskey and pigpen”(203). This description shows that most of the men in the lynch mob were drunk and not thinking straight, they weren’t themselves. Scout also shows how frightened Atticus

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