should never hurt an innocent person no matter the situation. In Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird the mockingbird symbolizes all that is innocent and all that is harmless in society. Harper Lee uses two characters to show the innocence in people and to show how this innocence is often killed: Tom Robinson and Boo Radley. The theme in To Kill a Mockingbird‚ that often the innocent are harmed by the wicked unjustly and intentionally‚ only to be saved by the brave and intelligent‚ who try hard to show
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but continues on in it as an underlying theme. It is a sin to kill a mockingbird‚ Atticus states this and when he does he is not just talking about birds. He is also talking about people and objects. He uses a mockingbird as a metaphor of innocence. This innocence represents Scout‚ Tom Robinson‚ and even “Boo” Radley. Atticus may not have directed this quote towards these people but they are included in it. Scout is seen as a mockingbird to the reader during the Tom Robinson trial‚ Tom Robinson is
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Her childish innocence brings joy to Holden since it serves as a stark contrast to his dreary and depressing worldview. He is interested in preserving innocence and keeping childhood last forever‚ as seen in his desire to be the “catcher in the rye” figure‚ “[catching] everybody if they start to go over the cliff…[coming] out from somewhere
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significant. One never feels different on birthdays or at the start of new-year. That day I grew up‚ and I never felt the same again. I went and sat five pews from the front every day for thirty-three years‚ asking for forgiveness for the day I lost my innocence. My neighbour was my hero. I remember the day she had taken it off her wrist‚ and flicked it carelessly onto the cushions at the back of the couch. I hadn’t seen many before‚ and was startled at how the sight of it made my heart gallop within my
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their parents‚ he receives abuse and bitterness. Consequently this means Johnny has no one to look for when he feels alone‚ which is a leading factor in what made him grow up quickly‚ thus losing his innocence at a young age. However‚ this is just one way that caused Johnny to suffer a loss of innocence.
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In S.E. Hinton’s The Outsiders‚ the teenagers are faced with extremely mature issues. They are partially to totally scarred from what they experienced. They lost their innocence either by choice of by force. As a result of the dismal situations the characters in The Outsiders experienced‚ they have been robbed of their innocence and will be damaged for the rest of their lives. The reality of the world is very eye-opening and horrifying. Experiencing these realities at a young age can have negative
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suffering permeates through Blake’s dolorous poem "London‚" which depicts a city of causalities fallen to their own psychological and ideological demoralization‚)which depicts a city of the picture of the exploitation and vulnerability of innocence . Innocence is devastated again and again. It is as if that England has stagnated morally and this moral degradation clearly expresses itself in the form of physically impaired children. Though the poem is set in the London of Blake’s time‚ his use of
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The Relevance of Flowers in The Age of Innocence In the book The Age of Innocence‚ Edith Wharton shows the struggles of a man to choose between the safety that following social rules provides‚ and the adventurous dangers of choosing what is regarded as "morally incorrect." The purity and security of social conventions is represented by the lilies-of-the-valley. In the language of flowers these lilies are the embodiment of the "[r]eturn of happiness" (354)‚ and therefore serve as a symbol for the
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Censorship and Literature: Term Paper Ours is an age of information and technology‚ convenient‚ and readily-available. Any piece of information‚ opinion and critique is all but a mouse-click away. Like most advancements in technology‚ this is both a boon and a bane‚ a double-edged sword. The age of the Internet‚ in which we all reside now‚ has brought forth its fair share of controversies over the past few years. From the leaked sex tapes of Paris Hilton and Kim Kardashian‚ to the relatively more
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The Age of Innocence focuses on several different themes throughout the course of the novel. These themes are recurrent and one can seem them being used at various times throughout the story. They add meaning to the story and give readers of Edith Wharton’s novel many things to take into consideration during and after reading it. Class: This is evidently the largest theme in The Age of Innocence. The wealthiest of New York’s elite are the central focus of the novel. Being well-respected and
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