Symbolism In To Kill A Mockingbird

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Karlee Duncan Lit. & Comp. II Honors Mrs. Werner 21 April 2014 To Kill a Mockingbird “Mockingbirds do nothing for us but sing all day. That’s why it’s a sin to kill one” (103). To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee tells of a small town life, disrupted by an unfair trial of a black man accused of rape.It has many underlying points, like the children trying to meet Boo Radley and new friends in the summer. As named in the title, the mockingbird is used several times to symbolize innocence destroyed by evil, the mockingbird is an innocent animal doing nothing but singing, while the one who shoots it down is the evil one destroying all innocence. The mockingbird represents certain characters throughout the story who have been metaphorically “shot down”. The curious character Boo Radley is symbolized by the mockingbird. Boo Radley is being deprived of a natural right to live. After doing on wrong thing, Mr. Radley decides that the best way to keep his son out of trouble is to lock him up: “The doors of the Radley place were closed on weekends as well as Sundays. The Radley boy was not se...

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