Summary
This chapter recounts the history of Cholly Breedlove.
His mother abandons him on a trash heap when he is four days old,
but his Great Aunt Jimmy rescues him. She beats his mother and his
mother runs away. After four years of school, Cholly gathers the
courage to ask Aunt Jimmy his father’s name; it is Samson Fuller.
After two more years of school, Cholly takes a job at Tyson’s Feed
and Grain Store and meets a man named Blue Jack. Blue Jack enthralls
Cholly with his stories and shares the heart of a watermelon with
him at a church picnic. Cholly remembers this kindness for a long
time.
Then Aunt Jimmy gets sick. The community calls in M’Dear,
the local healing woman, whose height and authority impress Cholly. She
prescribes pot liquor, and Aunt Jimmy begins to improve, but then
she eats a peach cobbler and dies. Cholly finds her the next morning.
He does not immediately feel grief, because everyone takes care
of him during the funeral and he is fascinated by all the excitement.
Aunt Jimmy’s brother, O.V., and his family plan to take care of
him.
Cholly tries to impress one of his older cousins, Jake,
by taking him to a place where the girls are. Jake persuades a girl
named Suky to take a walk with him, and Cholly persuades the girl
he likes, Darlene, to come along as well. They eat muscadine berries
and chase each other, and then lie down to rest. When they get up
to head back, Darlene tickles Cholly, and the two of them begin
to touch each other. Just as Cholly is having sex for the first
time, two white hunters shine their flashlights upon him. They
tell him to continue while they watch, and Cholly pretends to finish.
The men leave when they hear their dogs. Cholly is furious with
Darlene instead of with the white men because some part of him knows
that if he feels anger against the white men, it will destroy him.
It occurs to Cholly, irrationally,
that Darlene might be pregnant, and he decides to run away and look
for his father. He finds some money that Aunt Jimmy had hidden and
spends several months working his way toward Macon, Georgia, where his
father lives. He finally purchases a bus ticket, arrives in Macon,
and is sent to an alley to look for his father. There he finds men
gambling in various states of excitement and desperation. When he
asks for Samson Fuller, he finds a man who looks especially fierce,
but who is, to Cholly’s surprise, shorter than he is. Samson thinks
that Cholly has been sent by a creditor (or perhaps the mother of
another child he has fathered) and curses him. Cholly stumbles back
into the street and, in his effort not to cry, defecates in his
pants. He runs to the river, hides under the pier, and washes his
clothes after dark. For the first time, he feels grief for Aunt
Jimmy.
From this point forward, Cholly is free in a dangerous
way. He loves and beats women, he takes and leaves jobs, and he
kills three white men—all the while remaining indifferent. He is
indifferent about when or how he dies. He meets Pauline, and her
sweetness and innocence make him want to marry her, but marriage
makes him feel trapped. His interest in life is sapped, and he begins
to drink. Most of all, he does not know how to relate to his children.
Now, in the present, Cholly comes home drunk and finds
Pecola doing the dishes. With mixed motives of tenderness and rage,
both fueled by guilt, he rapes her. She faints, and he covers her
with a quilt. She wakes to find her mother looking down at her.