To Kill a Mockingbird

How does Rev. Sykes feel about the trial?

Asked by
Last updated by anonymous
1 Answers
Log in to answer
In Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird When Scout, Jem, and Dill watch the Robinson trial from the “colored” balcony, Reverend Sykes is the only African-American person who speaks to them or who is even named. Even when the entire balcony stands to honor Atticus after the trial, Reverend Sykes serves as the voice of the silent group, explaining what’s going on not only to Scout but also to the reader. What effect does making a major mouthpiece of the African-Americans in the novel a considerate preacher have on how the reader perceives that community? Why do the other African-Americans, besides Calpurnia, lack much of a voice in the novel?

While the character of Reverend Sykes suggests that the African-American community has its own organization invisible to the white residents, Scout’s position as first-person narrator means that we as readers can only access that organization filtered through a white person’s perspective. The novel from the point of view of Reverend Sykes would be very different indeed.