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Theme Of Innocence In To Kill A Mockingbird

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In the world, all children are born pure and innocent. It is through corrupting events that society slowly spoils their purity and rots their innocence over time. In To Kill A Mockingbird, Harper Lee manifests the process of said corruption of innocence and purity through the growth of the three main child characters. Dill Harper Lee implies throughout her novel To Kill A Mockingbird that loss of innocence occurs, especially in troubling times, through Dill, Jem, and Scout. Lee uses the middle child, Dill, to convey the loss of innocence and purity. After Scout walks Dill out of the courtroom because he is crying, he says, “I don’t care one speck. It ain’t right, somehow it ain’t right to do ‘em that way. Hasn’t anybody got any business talkin’ like that- it just makes me sick” (266). Since he says it makes him sick, this is a hyperbole. This hyperbole shows Dill realizes that most of the white population of Maycomb is extremely judgemental and racist, and do not consider black people equal to white people. Tom Robinson did not stand a chance in this trial, and everyone knew it, even Atticus, and Dill is finally understanding what the world is really like. After Scout finds Dill under her bed, she narrates,“ He could add and subtract faster than lightning, but he preferred his own twilight world, a world where babies slept, waiting to be gathered like morning lilies. He was slowly talking himself to sleep and taking me with him, but in the quietness of his foggy island

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