Wednesday 18 November 2009

How does Harper Lee control the rise and fall of intensity in Chapter 6 of To Kill a Mockingbird?

This is
one of the most interesting chapters in the novel, and authortakes her reader on a wild ride
full of childish curiosity, intrigue, danger, innocently off-color humor and a near sighting of
--all in one night. It is Dill's last evening in Maycomb for the summer, andand Dill are
pretending how to spend it, though they have already decided that a raid on the Radley's back
porch is in order.suggests that they "watch for Mr. Avery," and Lee launches into a
story about the children previously witnessing an extraordinary event:


... an arc of yellow water descending from the leaves and splashing
in the yellow circle of the street light, some ten feet from source to earth... 
()

It...


No comments:

Post a Comment

To what degree were the U.S., Great Britain, Germany, the USSR, and Japan successful in regards to their efforts in economic mobilization during the...

This is an enormous question that can't really be answered fully in this small space. But a few generalizations can be made. Bo...