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Beloved Toni Morrison
Part One: Chapters 4–6
Summary: Chapter 4
Denver hurts Paul D by asking him how long he plans to
hang around. Sethe is mortified by Denver's behavior but refuses
to allow Paul D to criticize her daughter. Paul D interprets this
as a sign of intense motherly love and thinks it is dangerous for
an ex-slave to love anything too much. Paul D has learned to love
the individuals in his life only partially, so that he has enough
love left over for the next person when the first is taken away.
Paul D promises Sethe that she can safely reenter her
past because he will be there to catch her if she falls. He invites
Denver and Sethe to a carnival in town that is having a special
day for blacks. At the carnival, Denver surprises herself by having
a good time. The people they see there greet her casually, rather
than showing her the contempt she expects. Because he is such an
extrovert and so shamelessly thrilled by the carnival, Paul D is
a hit with the other carnival-goers. He thus helps reintegrate Sethe
and Denver into the community, and he makes a few acquaintances.
He also inquires about getting a job. Paul D is amused by the spectacle
of the supposed Wild African Savage, because he says he knew the
man back in Roanoke. On the way to and from the carnival, the smell
of rotting roses is overpowering. Also, both on the way there and
on the way back, Sethe notices that the three shadows of Paul D,
Denver, and herself overlap so as to appear to be holding hands.
She interprets this as a promising sign that signals future happiness.
Summary: Chapter 5
A fully dressed woman walks out of a stream and falls
asleep beneath a mulberry tree. The woman moves to a tree stump
near the steps of 124, where Paul D, Sethe,
and Denver find her as they return from the carnival. Sethe suddenly
feels a strange, irrepressible need to urinate and is reminded of
her water breaking before Denver's birth. Denver and Paul D take
the woman inside, where she drinks cup after cup of water. Her name,
it turns out, is Beloved. Her skin is as smooth as a baby's, and
she has no recollection of the past. Denver notes that Here Boy,
the dog that was disfigured during one of the baby ghost's rages,
has disappeared.
Beloved sleeps for four days, waking only to ask for water.
While Beloved sleeps, Denver cares for her with a possessive devotion. Beloved's
presence makes Paul D uneasy. He remarks that although she acts
and sounds sick, she does not show visible signs of ill healththe other
day, he tells Sethe, he saw her pick up a rocking chair with one hand.
He claims that Denver was also watching, but when he asks Denver
for confirmation, she denies having seen any such thing.
Summary: Chapter 6
Beloved develops a strange attachment to Sethe. Although
she usually hates discussing the past, Sethe enjoys pouring stories
into Beloved's eager ears. Beloved asks what has happened to what
she calls Sethe's diamonds. Sethe replies that she once owned
some crystal earrings given to her by Mrs. Garner for her wedding.
She then recounts the story of her haphazard, patchwork wedding
dress.
As she watches Sethe arrange Denver's hair, Beloved
asks about Sethe's mother. Sethe explains that she rarely saw her.
Sethe remembers that her mother once took her aside and showed her
a circle and a cross that had been burned into her skin. She said
that Sethe could use these marks to identify her body if she died.
When Sethe asked to be marked, too, her mother slapped her. Sethe
tells the girls that she did not understand why her mother had done
this until she had a mark of her own.
Sethe mentions that her mother was hanged, and
she is suddenly stunned by the recollection of a disturbing memory
that she had forgotten. Sethe ran to her dead mother, but Nan, another
slave woman, pulled Sethe away from her mother's body when Sethe
tried to search for the mark. Speaking in her
mother's long-forgotten language, Nan told Sethe that the two women
had come across the sea in the same ship. The white crewmembers
had raped them repeatedly, but Sethe's mother threw away the children
she had by the white men. Sethe was kept because she had a black
father, for whom she was named.
Analysis: Chapters 4–6
Although the cheer of the carnival in Chapter 4 is
tempered somewhat by the stench of the rotting roses, the chapter
ends on a note of optimism that is perhaps unparalleled in the rest
of the book. Sethe begins to think that with Paul D there to support
her, she may be able to confront her past. There are other beginnings:
Denver and Paul D begin to reconcile with each other, Sethe and
Denver begin reconciliation with the community, and Paul D begins
to feel at home in Cincinnati.
Beloved's mystical arrival in Chapter 5 interrupts
the progress that is made in Chapter 4. In
the subsequent chapters, the existing relationships in the novel
become unhinged, and the characters recombine with unusual force.
Beloved seems to be a manifestation of Sethe's infant daughter who
was killed. Details linking her to the daughter include her age,
her name, her lack of memory, her smooth, new skin, Here Boy's
disappearance, Sethe's strange sensation of her water breaking,
and Beloved's impossible knowledge of Sethe's earrings. It is never
made clear, however, whether Beloved is a reincarnation of the childan
actual living human who is inhabited by the spirit of the dead babyor
simply a ghost. Paul D's observation of Beloved's secret strength
suggests that she is capable of the supernatural violence wreaked
by the poltergeist before Paul D's arrival.
In their actions, the residents of 124 treat
Beloved as they would a human visitor in need. In their thoughts,
however, they associate her with the murdered infant. As the story
develops, all three forge relationships with her that are governed
by these thoughts. Although Beloved appears on the surface to be
a woman, she resembles a baby in many ways. She does not walk steadily,
her speech is impaired, she does not have full control over her
bodily functions, and she sleeps constantly. Beloved also represents
the untrained and undisciplined desire of an infant. Her single-minded
fixation on Sethe resembles that of an infant, who is unable to
conceive of an identity separate from its mother and who thinks
of its mother as its exclusive possession.
Sethe tries desperately to keep the past at bay, but Beloved's arrival
demonstrates the difficultyindeed, the impossibilityof repressing
the past. Over the course of the novel, Sethe's confrontation with
that past will prove both destructive and productive. This section
emphasizes the beneficial aspects of the process: in Beloved's presence,
memories surface that help Sethe understand her past and, consequently,
herself. For example, in Chapter 6 Beloved
inspires Sethe's memory of her mother's hanging to come to the surface. Sethe's
story of the hanging marks the first time Denver has ever heard
about her mother's mother. Especially poignant is the blank space
in Sethe's memory for the forgotten language of her early years.
Perhaps Sethe's failure to remember the African language spoken
by her mother is a deliberate part of her attempt to repress her
memory of her mother. Importantly, the lost language represents the
kind of cultural devastation suffered by the slaves. Just as Beloved
partially restores that lost cultural history to Sethe along with her
personal history, Morrison's novel restores a repressed part of American
history to contemporary readers by including the stories and memories
of plantation slaves. Later, in Beloved's monologue in Chapter 22,
the slaves' ancestors' memories of the Middle Passage, the ocean crossing
between Africa and America, are evoked.
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