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Free Study Guide: The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison - Free BookNotes Downloadable / Printable Version THE BLUEST EYE: FREE ONLINE STUDY GUIDE
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Claudia vomits later in the day. Her mother scolds her for making a mess on the blanket, complaining about not having time to wash it. Claudia only hears the drone of her mother’s voice complaining. She knows her mother is not talking to her, only to the vomit, but her mother calls the vomit by her name--Claudia. She wipes up the vomit and covers it with a towel. Claudia lies down again and notices the rags at the window have come loose and cold air is entering the room, but she dares not mention it to her mother. She is humiliated by her mother’s anger and she cries. She thinks her mother hates her for getting sick. She does not know her mother is really angry at the illness itself. She vows not to get sick again.
Frieda comes in and feels sorry for Claudia. She sings a song to her "When the deep purple falls over sleepy garden walls, someone thinks of me . . . " Claudia falls asleep and dreams about plums and walls and "someone."
Claudia pauses to wonder if her childhood was really as painful as she remembers it. She decides it was only mildly bad. Then she decides it was a "productive and fructifying pain." She remembers love also seeped in everywhere in the house. When the flannel came loose during the night and she coughed, she heard her mother come in and readjust the quilt, re-pin the flannel, and feel her forehead. Now, when she thinks of autumn, she thinks of "somebody with hands who does not want me to die."
She also remembers that Mr. Henry came in the autumn. They overheard their mother discussing the idea of renting a room to a roomer. Mr. Henry had been living with Miss Della Jones, but she had become too senile to keep a good house. The neighbor women discuss Della Jones’s bad luck. Her husband left her for another woman, Peggy, one of Old Slack Bessie’s girls. He was said to give as a reason for leaving that he was tired of Miss Della’s use of violet water as perfume. He wanted a woman to smell like a woman. After he left, Miss Della suffered several strokes and became senile.
The women add that all of Miss Della’s people were not very bright. They remember grinning Hattie, Della’s sister, who "wasn’t never right" and they remember Aunt Julia, who still "trots" up and down Sixteenth Street talking to herself. The County would not take her in on the grounds that she was not harming anyone. The women laugh about how scared she makes them when they come upon her early in the morning.
Claudia and Frieda are washing Mason jars. They do not listen to the words of the conversation; they only watch out for the voices.
The women hope no one will let them run around senile when they get old. One woman announces that Della’s sister is coming from North Carolina to look after her. Another woman speculates that this sister only wants to get Della’s house. The first woman scolds her for such an evil thought, but the second woman claims that Henry Washington said this sister has not seen Miss Della for fifteen years. The women say they always thought Henry would marry Miss Della. They discuss Henry’s marriage history. He has never been married. They wonder if he is picky. Someone says he is just sensible. She claims he is a steady worker with quiet ways. They ask Claudia’s mother how much money she is charging him. She answers, five dollars every two weeks. They agree this will help her a good deal.
Claudia thinks of their conversation as "a gently wicked dance sound meets sound, curtsies, shimmies, and retires." The girls do not know the meaning of all their words, but they keep track of the "edge, the curl, the thrust of their emotions."
Mr. Henry arrives at their house on Saturday night. He smells wonderful "like
trees and lemon vanishing cream, and Nu Nile Hair Oil and flecks of Sen-Sen."
Claudia remembers that she and her sister were never introduced to Mr.
Henry, "merely pointed out," along with other household rooms
and furnishings. They are surprised that he speaks to them. He calls them
Greta Garbo and Ginger Rogers. He plays a game with them, holding out
a penny to give them and then making it disappear. Their mother and father
look on amused.
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