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Current Search - imagination in To Kill a Mockingbird
1 That should appeal to your imagination.
To Kill a MockingbirdBy Harper Lee Context In PART 1: Chapter 11
2 "Let's not let our imaginations run away with us, dear," she said.
To Kill a MockingbirdBy Harper Lee Context In PART 1: Chapter 2
3 Mrs. Crenshaw, the local seamstress, had as much imagination as Mrs. Merriweather.
To Kill a MockingbirdBy Harper Lee Context In PART 2: Chapter 27
4 He simply murmured, "Her use of bathroom invective leaves nothing to the imagination."
To Kill a MockingbirdBy Harper Lee Context In PART 1: Chapter 9
5 I imagined how it would be: when it happened, he'd just be sitting in the swing when I came along.
To Kill a MockingbirdBy Harper Lee Context In PART 2: Chapter 26
6 Like Mr. Heck Tate, I imagined a person facing me, went through a swift mental pantomime, and concluded that he might have held her with his right hand and pounded her with his left.
To Kill a MockingbirdBy Harper Lee Context In PART 2: Chapter 17
7 I was not so sure, but Jem told me I was being a girl, that girls always imagined things, that's why other people hated them so, and if I started behaving like one I could just go off and find some to play with.
To Kill a MockingbirdBy Harper Lee Context In PART 1: Chapter 4
8 Miss Caroline seemed unaware that the ragged, denim-shirted and floursack-skirted first grade, most of whom had chopped cotton and fed hogs from the time they were able to walk, were immune to imaginative literature.
To Kill a MockingbirdBy Harper Lee Context In PART 1: Chapter 2
9 She thought it would be adorable if some of the children were costumed to represent the county's agricultural products: Cecil Jacobs would be dressed up to look like a cow; Agnes Boone would make a lovely butterbean, another child would be a peanut, and on down the line until Mrs. Merriweather's imagination and the supply of children were exhausted.
To Kill a MockingbirdBy Harper Lee Context In PART 2: Chapter 27