He also "melt[s] into the woods" 2. This guy knows Nature like he's one with it. Why is Sixo so different from the other men at Sweet Home? The book is a little tricky here— surprise! He's described as "[i]ndigo with a flame-red tongue" 2.
So who care? Well, Sixo is a reminder of how those "[s]ixty million and more" "Epigraph" affected by slavery weren't just black people. And more than that, before the enslavement of black people in America, there was the whole dispossession of the Native Americans. Sixo helps us remember the histories that come before and even lead up to African-American history.
Parents Home Homeschool College Resources. Study Guide. By Toni Morrison. Sixo's name is an allusion to the "Sixty Million and More" Africans who died in the Middle Passage, and his death by fire is symbolic of their deaths.
While dying, though, Sixo laughs and cries out "Seven-O" because he knows there is a child on the way, a child which he believes will be born to freedom by the Thirty-Mile Woman. That child is an uncertain hope, and a dream, both for him and for millions of Negroes. Stamp Paid's answer is not an optimistic one: "All he can. The implication is that the white folks will continue to view them as animals, and that black people must endure all they can until this changes.
Paul D's final response of "Why? While schoolteacher tried to burn him alive, Sixo only laughed—the first time Paul D ever heard him do so. Schoolteacher and the other men dragged Paul D back home, where he encountered Sethe. Despite the recent disaster, she still intended to run.
It was in the aftermath of the failed escape that Paul D first learned the price he fetched: nine hundred dollars. The knowledge forever affected his understanding of himself. He questions whether his life since his aborted escape has been worth it, whether he should have thrown himself into the fire with Sixo. A white man stops by to ask if the men know Judy of Plank Road. Though Stamp knows her, he feigns ignorance.
The white man reprimands Paul D for drinking on church grounds and then rides away. When Vashti came to him one night to tell him that she had returned for good, he felt the terrible urge to break her neck. Instead, he changed his name. The conversation turns to , and Stamp Paid tells Paul D that he was present when Sethe tried to kill her children.
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