Holcomb In To Kill A Mockingbird

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Although Capote characterizes Holcomb to be a desolate town, he more so intends to expose how an evil act can strip the innocence of a community; therefore implying how dark the world will become if individuals continue to act immorally.

Towards the beginning of the story, Capote writes that “as the cleaning party progressed [...] they acquired additional fuel for the impending fire--- blood-soiled bedclothes, mattresses, a bedside rug, a Teddy-bear doll” (Capote 78). Gut-wrenching asyndeton deepens the emotional attachment. Intending to create a somber feeling, Capote lists off the victims’ belongings, each item is more and more personal, until you reach the toy of child. Repeatedly, these words were constructed in way that as each item unfolds as more intimate than the previous. people of all ages can relate back to their own lives Readers can comprehend how a single act, years in the past, can affect the lives of readers in the future.
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The specific details tug at your heart, knowing change in equipment likewise represents the disquieting shift in Holcomb. The once stagnant city, filled with ordinary men, carrying common gear, has taken a sharp turn downhill as they encounter this new, terrifying experience, requiring the clean up of corpses,

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