Tom Robinson Trial

Words: 632
Pages: 3

An innocent sweet townsman gets accused of rape and then gets shot and killed. There was a town called Maycomb, Alabama. This novel deals with serious issues like racial injustice and the loss of innocence. Atticus defends a black man who was falsely accused of raping a girl he would see on his way to and from work, named Mayella. The story is seen through the eyes of a young Scout and is truly about her coming of age as it is about the trial and its impact on the community. It is a big lesson about the themes of morality, struggle against prejudice. Which then takes it to the argument that Tom Robinson would have been found innocent if not for the racist community. Tom Robinson was as normal as everyone else. He is a simple black man who works …show more content…
There are multiple characters in the novel who would agree with him being a good guy. Atticus even says how hardworking he is and an honest man. “Tom was twenty-five years of age; he was married with three children” (lee 216). Tom Robinson had been in trouble with the law as Atticus states in court “he had been in trouble with the law before: he once received thirty days for disorderly conduct”(Lee 16), but nothing compared to what was about to happen to him and his well-being. Tom Robinson begins to face serious problems following an accusation that catalyzes the central conflict of the story. Tom would walk past her house on the way to and from work everyday, yet he was not the one that started things. He claims that “one day she asked me to come inside the fence and bust up a chiffarobe for her” (Lee 217). Tom would have not been caught up in her business if it was not for her conversing with him in the first place. Regrettably, that was not the only time he went over there. Tom was asked if he had ever been there again and his response was, “Well I went lots of times” (Lee 217). Tom would not have continued to go back if it were not for her calling him