Scout's Bedroom
In the Novel, To Kill a Mockingbird, Scout is condemned as a disgrace of her gender. Her bedroom is an accurate clone of her personality. She has a soothing blue room despite the gender the color symbolizes. Her lengthy walls only have a wrestling poster suspended on them, because Scout does not desire worthless trinkets other girls may possess. Her counter space is vacant, for the identical reason her walls are bare. Scout has a book cupboard on the left side of the room. Scout values literacy, and even keeps an extraordinary book from Dill in her cupboard. Scout has a small dresser filled with overalls on the opposite side of her room. Many believe that the manner in which she dresses is condescended from the normality, but she is confident in her attire. Lastly, Scout has a cylinder basket in the crook of her room. This is filled with toys, but not the standard schoolgirl toys. She has baseball bats and items of that nature inside of her basket. Scout is drastically diverse from peers of the same gender, and her room is a prime explanation for that.
In the Novel, To Kill a Mockingbird, Scout is condemned as a disgrace of her gender. Her bedroom is an accurate clone of her personality. She has a soothing blue room despite the gender the color symbolizes. Her lengthy walls only have a wrestling poster suspended on them, because Scout does not desire worthless trinkets other girls may possess. Her counter space is vacant, for the identical reason her walls are bare. Scout has a book cupboard on the left side of the room. Scout values literacy, and even keeps an extraordinary book from Dill in her cupboard. Scout has a small dresser filled with overalls on the opposite side of her room. Many believe that the manner in which she dresses is condescended from the normality, but she is confident in her attire. Lastly, Scout has a cylinder basket in the crook of her room. This is filled with toys, but not the standard schoolgirl toys. She has baseball bats and items of that nature inside of her basket. Scout is drastically diverse from peers of the same gender, and her room is a prime explanation for that.