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The Role Of Dandelion In To Kill A Mockingbird

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Why is it that we look at a rose with beautiful warm colors, but contains painful thorns that people tend to look past with love and care? However, one would look at a dandelion that is just as pulchritudinous and with its yellow and white blossoming colors, and destroy them? Humans in our society opinionated things, people, and places without identifying. Correspondingly, dandelions include relief from liver disorders, diabetes, and more. If society could take a step back, the rose and the dandelion are not so different. Furthermore, a flower is a seed bearing part of a plant, consisting of reproductive organs that are typically surrounded by a brightly colored corolla and a green calyx. I believe a dandelion and a rose meet those requirements. In the book, To Kill a Mockingbird, prejudism plays a major role in the epic novel. Not just in the 1930 's but, in present society as well. In this novel, Tom Robinson is falsely accused of raping Mary Ewell in …show more content…

Since this novel is based around the 1930 's, the Great Depression was in effect. African Americans were greatly affected. In fact, their unemployment rate was four times as much as Whites during the Great Depression. In addition, African Americans were discriminated for just glancing at a White woman. As a matter of fact, Tom Robinson helped Mayella all that he could. In Chapter 19, Tom Robinson says,"I 'd tip m 'hat when I 'd go by, and one day she asked me to come inside the fence to bust up a chiffarobe for her." When Tom was testifying to the jury, he admitted that he felt sorry for Mayella. The jury were furious that he could feel sorry for a White woman. By doing so he was putting himself above her. They could never tolerate that (https://www.enotes.com/homework-help/what-made-tom-visit-ewells-house-first-place-468413). Harper Lee shows readers how Tom Robinson struggled with acceptance from

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