Because there is no room downstairs - in the white section. However, there is also barely room in the balcony - the colored section. Reverend Sykes finds them some room to sit.
The children end up sitting upstairs in the courtroom in "To Kill a Mockingbird" because there is a lack of space downstairs for them to sit with the rest of the audience. They are placed in the colored balcony, which is the designated area for African Americans in the segregated courtroom. This separation highlights the racial discrimination prevalent in Maycomb.
Children typically sit in the gallery section of the courtroom, which is where the public sits. They are not involved in the court proceedings unless they are called as a witness. Sitting in the gallery allows children to observe the legal process and learn about courtroom etiquette.
Aunt Alexandra and Miss Maudie locate the children for Atticus in Chapter 21 as they are not in the courtroom as expected. They find them sitting in the "colored balcony" watching the trial from a distance.
Instantly, Mary noticed that the children sitting on the bench at the door of the courtroom were squirming, apparently because they had waited a long time for her to come out.
In "To Kill a Mockingbird," the audience of the trial is segregated by race, with White people sitting in the main balcony and Black people sitting in the balcony above the courtroom. This arrangement reflects the prevalent racial segregation during that time period. In modern trials, the audience is typically not segregated by race, and seating arrangements are based more on courtroom capacity and logistics rather than discriminatory practices.
The Finch children sit with the black folks in "To Kill a Mockingbird" because their father, Atticus Finch, is defending a black man named Tom Robinson in a controversial rape trial. By sitting with the black community, the Finch children show solidarity with those marginalized by racism and injustice in their town.
The polite term for doing nothing in the book "To Kill A Mockingbird" was "sitting in." It referred to sitting and doing nothing, often in protest or in defiance of a situation.
In "To Kill a Mockingbird," the interruption in the trial is caused by Bob Ewell, who accuses Tom Robinson's wife of lying. This leads to a tense moment in the courtroom and highlights the racial tensions present in the story.
No, Atticus Finch does not die at the end of "To Kill a Mockingbird." The novel ends with Atticus sitting by Scout's bed after she falls asleep, signifying the end of the story.
Native Americans cherish their children. Sitting Bull did not want to kill children, much less drink their blood. I have to wonder how on earth this question came about.
In "To Kill a Mockingbird," the roomer at Miss Maudie's house is Mr. Avery. He is described as being a heavyset man who spends most of his time sitting on Miss Maudie's porch and spitting.
WHY
Moa. A New Zealand flightless bird which existed in NZ until the arrival of humans, in the sixteenth century. They proved to be sitting ducks for hunters, who ate them all.