In the eyes of Janie, from the moment she kissed
Johnny Taylor under the pear tree, love has been this powerful, gorgeous,
awakening experience. She had “pollen” in her eyes as she saw the long, lean
Johnny stroll up the street to her, and as she kisses Johnny she feels this
pure yet enticing rapture inside her. That is, until Nanny calls her in the
thwart her plans. In Janie’s world, the ideal for marriage is what she
experienced with Johnny that day under the pear tree. Even before he comes
bumbling along, she looks up at the tree and sees a simple yet captivating
phenomenon. “She saw the dust-bearing bee sink into the sanctum of a bloom; the
thousand sister-calyxes arch to meet the love embrace and the ecstatic shiver
of the tree from root to tiniest branch creaming in every blossom and frothing
with delight. So this was a marriage!” (11) Janie sees marriage as something that
naturally comes with love and the wonders of nature, but in her first two
marriages, she finds it to be quite different.
Logan Killicks isn’t a bad guy, but he isn’t the
type to marry. Old and ugly, Logan is a farmer who’d rather berate Janie for
not helping him with chores than speak any sort of “poetry” to her. He throws
Janie off quite a bit, and despite the early signs, she assumes that naturally,
she will learn to love him as she found love under the pear tree. When she
doesn’t, it crushes her, until she gets her wits about herself and leaves him
for Joe Starks.
Joe Starks isn’t a bad guy, either, but he’s
more of a salesman than a genuine human. He was fun to talk to Janie first met
him, so it makes sense why Janie would consider him a much more likely
candidate for her expected love experience. It seems quite promising at first,
until always strong-willed and independent Janie is forced to stay inside and
be an idle housewife. When she brings her concerns to him, he passes her off,
insisting it’s her “job” as the mayor’s wife to not impose herself on any major
tasks but rather, basically, sit still and look pretty.
Tea Cake Woods is different. He’s “not like
other boys”. He listens. He likes Janie for her personality, not just her
beauty or physicality. He wants to know her for her, not put her on display or
use her as a working mule. We as readers are quite skeptical of Tea Cake, now
that we’ve seen Janie go through two unsuccessful relationships with men who
ended up being bland and self-serving. Through Tea Cake, though, Janie finds
love and pleasure in life. He includes her in his adventures, makes her feel
like part of the group, and works with her to find a working situation that
suits them both the best. And yet, Tea Cake has his flaws. He’s addicted to
gambling. He doesn’t keep all his promises. While the Turners are in town,
feeling the pressure to prove who’s boss in their home, Tea Cake turns to
beating Janie for a brief time. This aspect of their relationship is probably
one of the toughest for readers to wrap their heads around, and it was
certainly hard for me.
But did Janie capital-L Love Tea Cake? I think
she did. She dressed for his funeral in overalls intentionally, as that
reminded her of their relationship. When Joe Starks died, she just wanted to
mourning and boo-hoos to end so she could go on with her life. She dressed up
in black for show. But for Tea Cake, Janie kept him with her. She forgives
herself for the tragic end of his life, it seems, but she genuinely mourns him.
And during his life, Janie seemed to be quite happy with him. They would play
together on the muck, and Tea Cake made her feel like “part of the group”,
whether it be goofing around with her in the fields, teaching her to shoot. She
calls him affectionate names, and tells the truth when she goes on trial
following his death.
Love is complicated. And in the world of
early-1900s Florida, it probably wasn’t any easier, especially for a woman like
Janie with her family history and circumstances. All Janie wants is to kiss a
handsome man like Johnny Taylor under the pear tree and love him forever and
sing and watch the bees pollinate flowers, but it takes her until she’s around
forty to get something close to that. It doesn’t last her very long, but you
can tell she’s grateful for the experience she had with Tea Cake, the one man
she truly loved.
I think Janie's relationship with Tea Cake brings her right back to her youthful ideals of love as expressed under the pear tree. Despite Logan and Joe's mistreatment, being with Tea Cake allows Janie to experience the type of romantic love she's always wanted. In class we mentioned that this third relationship offers almost a second childhood, a time for Janie to live the kind of idealized life her teenage self was torn away from at an early age. It does seem like Tea Cake and Janie share a capital-L love, and this love is especially evident as Janie struggles to cope with his tragic and rapid death.
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