I am an outgoing, and down to earth girl whose stuck in Batesville, Arkansas
I wonder what the world will be like 20 years from now
I hear music singing in my ears
I see hapiness
I want to be remembered
I am an outgoing, and down to earth girl whose stuck in Batesville, Arkansas
I pretend that I know everything
I feel the weight of the world on my shoulders
I touch people's feelings
I worry that I'll never get out of Arkansas
I cry for hungry and homeless children all over the world
I am an outgoing, and down to earth girl whose stuck in Batesville Arkansas.
I understand that nothing lasts forever
I say everything happens for a reason
I dream of living in a big city
I try to do the best I can
I hope that everything will work itself out
I am an outgoing, and down to earth girl whose stuck in Batesville, Arkansas
Tuesday, August 23, 2011
Thursday, August 11, 2011
To Kill A Mockingbird
Harper Lee tells the story of a little girl, and what she goes through while her father is defending a black man. The narrator's father was a lawyer who represented the black man being charged of raping a white woman. The narrator being only a little kid tries to understand the racist and prejudicest world around her. Lee explains the hardship this family goes through as the father tries to do the right thing.
The book had a very good lesson and explained everything the right way. Lee held nothing back and didn't care if it upset some people. Eventhough the father fought a very good argument during the trial, the black man still was put in jail. This is typical of what happened in does types of cases in the 1930's. It didn't matter how it happened or who was responsible, the blacks would always be guilty and the whites would always be right back then.
The book had a very good lesson and explained everything the right way. Lee held nothing back and didn't care if it upset some people. Eventhough the father fought a very good argument during the trial, the black man still was put in jail. This is typical of what happened in does types of cases in the 1930's. It didn't matter how it happened or who was responsible, the blacks would always be guilty and the whites would always be right back then.
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