Summary
White people believed that . . . under
every dark skin was a jungle . . . In a way, [Stamp Paid] thought,
they were right . . . But it wasn't the jungle blacks brought with
them. . . . It was the jungle whitefolks planted in them. And it
grew . . . until it invaded the whites who had made it.
When Stamp Paid hears that Paul D has left 124,
he feels guilty for having told Paul D about Sethe's crime without
considering her family's welfare. Stamp Paid reminds himself that
he has a duty to Sethe and Denver by virtue of their connection
to Baby Suggs, of whom he was very fond. He thinks about her late-life
depression, which deeply saddened him. He tried to convince her
to continue preaching God's word, but she claimed she had lost all
motivation after the white men's intrusion into her household.
For the first time since Baby Suggs's death, Stamp returns
to 124. When he approaches the house, he
hears a clamor of disturbing, disembodied conversation. He can discern
only the word mine. Although he has a habit of walking into houses
without knockingit is the one privilege he claims in exchange for
the good he does for the Cincinnati communityStamp Paid feels uncomfortable
entering 124 unannounced. He stands awkwardly
at the door and thinks about what he ought to do.
Sethe takes Beloved and Denver ice-skating, partly
to show that she has not been devastated by Paul D's departure.
Later, Sethe hears Beloved humming a song Sethe made up to sing
to her children. Faced with such evidence, Sethe finally recognizes
Beloved as her resurrected daughter. Now that her dead child has
rejoined her, she decides to discard the past and the future for
the timeless present of 124.
After returning to 124 several
more times and finding himself unable to knock on each occasion,
Stamp Paid finally works up the courage to knock on Sethe's door.
No one answers. When he peeks in the window, he sees Denver sleeping
in front of the fire, but he does not recognize Beloved and her
presence disturbs him. When he asks around about the stranger in
Sethe's home, his friend Ella tells him that Paul D is sleeping
at the church. Stamp chastises Ella for not offering Paul D a place
to stay, and he is angered by the community's general neglect of
Paul D and of the women.
Stamp wonders whether perhaps he has made a mistake in
staying away from 124 for so long, whether
he might not owe something to Baby Suggs's kin. Earlier in his life,
he decided that he no longer owed anyone anything. While a slave,
Stamp was forced to give his wife to his master's son to sleep with,
and he concluded that his wife was a gift so terrible that it freed
him forever after of all obligation. For this reason, he changed
his name from Joshua to Stamp Paid.
Sethe cooks all morning at a restaurant and then takes
her lunch home. Occasionally, she steals food and supplies because
she is too proud to endure the local grocer's racism. She feels
ashamed of her petty thievery and remembers an occasion when Sixo
stole a small pig from Sweet Home. When schoolteacher confronted
him, Sixo cleverly talked his way out of blame by insisting that
he was actually improving schoolteacher's property by feeding himself
so that he could better work the land. Schoolteacher whipped him
to teach him that definitions belonged to the definersnot to the
defined.
Sethe's memory of Sixo launches a series of other memories about
Sweet Home and slavery. One is so painful that Sethe has told it
to no one but Beloved: schoolteacher treated the slaves like farm stock,
measuring their body parts and studying them like biological specimens.
Once, Sethe overheard him giving a lesson to his nephews about her
in which he instructed them to categorize each of her characteristics
as either human or animal. Schoolteacher again manifested his cruelty
again when, after Baby Suggs's departure, he stopped Halle from
doing any more work outside Sweet Home, thus depriving him of the
chance to pay for the rest of his family's release from slavery.
This incident sparked the family to plot a secret escape. But their
plan met with a tragic conclusion: Halle went insane, Paul A was
hanged, Sixo was burned, and Paul D ended up with a bit in his mouth.
Sethe recalls one night when she and Halle discussed the days of
Mr. Garner's rule of Sweet Home, the days before schoolteacher and
his sadistic nephews arrived. Halle had surprised Sethe by saying
that he saw no real difference between Garner's kind of slavery
and schoolteacher's.
When Stamp runs away from 124 without
knocking, he believes that the undecipherable voices he hears
from the porch of the house belong to the black and angry dead.
The chapter ends with Stamp's thoughts about how slavery dehumanizes
everyone involved, including whites. By defining the blacks as jungle-like, the
whites plant resentment among the blacks that burgeons into a
real, jungle anger. The whites, in turn, become so frightened
of their own creation that they, too, began to behave brutally,
like animals. The jungle, Stamp thinks, touches everyone, but it
is normally hidden. Only from time to time does it manifest itself
in rumblings such as the ones he hears emanating from 124.
Analysis
In this chapter, Stamp Paid's feelings of guilt are interspersed
with Sethe's memories of schoolteacher and Sweet Home. The result
is a sort of dialogue centering on issues of responsibility and
blame. The majority of the black characters in Beloved are
unhappy, but it is unclear whether the white people are solely responsible
or whether the blacks' sorrows are to some extent due to their inability
to come to terms with themselves and their pasts. The chapter also
raises questions about what the black community owes to itself and
about the ties that bind people who are no longer slaves.
The complex, confused dynamics of Beloved's behavioralternately
weak and strong, vulnerable and invincible, loving and malicious,
needy and omnipotentrepresent the irony and contradiction inherent
in Stamp Paid's portrait of the black psyche. Stamp Paid believes
that black people feel the need to work extremely hard because they
wish to dissociate themselves from white people's image of them
as a savage, animalistic species. Yet, Stamp Paid notes, the harder
they work to demonstrate their humanity, the more bitter and angry
they become. In the end, that rage begins to threaten the very humanity
they had been trying to protect and emphasize. In this way, thinks
Stamp, the whites succeed in creating a kind of savagery where there
was none before, and that savagery in turn spreads to the whites
themselves. The result is a snarled and anarchic jungle in which
questions of blame and guilt can seem almost impossible to unravel.
Stamp Paid's meditation on the tangled network of guilt and retribution
that forms racism's jungle expands the chapter's focus from individual
characters and the local black community to the black community
at large.
Although, as his chosen name signifies, Stamp Paid used
to believe that his own suffering and deprivation freed him from
future obligations, he now begins to realize that it may be his
responsibility to look out for Denver's and Sethe's welfare. He
also decides that Baby Suggs is to blame for her own depression,
which he saw as her surrender to her oppressors. In Stamp's
mind, when Baby Suggs decided to stop speaking the Word, she made
a choice to wear the bit, even though Baby Suggs herself blamed
the whites for her suffering and cited the intrusion of the four
horsemen as the beginning of her emotional deterioration. Stamp
Paid reminds himself that the black community contributed to Baby
Suggs's eventual descent by failing to warn her of schoolteacher's
approach, thus hindering her ability to prevent the tragedy. These
memories end up muddying his formerly clear-cut understanding of
Baby Suggs's plight.
Sethe, too, deals with issues of guilt. Although she tells
herself that she does not need to explain to Beloved what led her
to murder a daughter because Beloved already understands, Sethe
nonetheless continues to detail her motivations mentally, which
suggests her need to justify her actions to herself. Sethe has invested
all of her identity in motherhood. Every sacrifice she made was
for her children and every abuse she suffered she felt as an offense
against her children because, in Sethe's eyes, her children are
extensions of herself and vice versa. Her behaviorplotting out
how to explain her act of infanticide to Beloved and to herselfsuggests
that however much Sethe blames her murder of Beloved on the oppression
of slavery, she in fact places a good deal of the blame for the
murder on her own shoulders.