"The only thing we have to fear is fear itself" was said by Franklin Delano Roosevelt in his 1933 presidential inaugural address. The country was in the depths of the Great Depression, and Roosevelt was elected in the hopes that he would be able to lift the country our of the Depression. He inaugural address is inspiring, including the above line.
When Scout describes Maycomb, she gives minute details regarding the look and feel of the town. In order to put the town, and therefore the events and book into a larger time frame, the author (Harper Lee) makes this reference to Roosevelt's speech. It also sets the stage for some frightening events that will occur in Maycomb and as foreshadowing that everything will be all right if the characters can remain brave.
This is an example of a rhetorical device known as an allusion. The phrase "nothing to fear but fear itself" is a well-known line from Franklin D. Roosevelt's inaugural speech. By referencing this, the author is incorporating a historical and thematic depth into the text.
scout said this when she was introducing maycomb in the 1st chapter but the qout is also from this guy who was up for election his name was somthing like Franklin ...
anaphora
Because things like the trial almost never happened in Maycomb; it was a rarity. Besides, there was nothing else to do in Maycomb. In the beginning of the novel it says that "Maycomb was a tired old town... there was nothing to do, nothing to buy and no money to buy it with" (or something like that).
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Scout describes Maycomb as a sleepy, old town where nothing ever happens and everyone knows each other's business. She also mentions the racial divisions and social injustices present in the town.
If it is an element, then by definition there is nothing else present.
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