Beloved
by Toni Morrison.
Beloved is a 1987 novel by the American writer Toni Morrison.
Set after the American Civil War (1861–1865), it is inspired by the story of an
African American slave, Margaret Garner, who escaped slavery in Kentucky late
January 1856 by fleeing to Ohio, a free state. In the novel, the protagonist
Sethe is also a slave who escapes slavery, running to Cincinnati, Ohio.
Summary:
Beloved begins in 1873 in Cincinnati, Ohio, where Sethe, a
former slave, has been living with her eighteen-year-old daughter Denver.
Sethe’s mother-in-law, Baby Suggs, lived with them until her death eight years
earlier. Just before Baby Suggs’s death, Sethe’s two sons, Howard and Buglar,
ran away. Sethe believes they fled because of the malevolent presence of an
abusive ghost that has haunted their house at 124 Bluestone Road for years.
Denver, however, likes the ghost, which everyone believes to be the spirit of
her dead sister.
On the day the novel begins, Paul D, whom Sethe has not seen
since they worked together on Mr. Garner’s Sweet Home plantation in Kentucky
approximately twenty years earlier, stops by Sethe’s house. His presence
resurrects memories that have lain buried in Sethe’s mind for almost two
decades. From this point on, the story will unfold on two temporal planes. The
present in Cincinnati constitutes one plane, while a series of events that took
place around twenty years earlier, mostly in Kentucky, constitutes the other.
This latter plane is accessed and described through the fragmented flashbacks
of the major characters. Accordingly, we frequently read these flashbacks
several times, sometimes from varying perspectives, with each successive
narration of an event adding a little more information to the previous ones.
From these fragmented memories, the following story begins to
emerge: Sethe, the protagonist, was born in the South to an African mother she
never knew. When she is thirteen, she is sold to the Garners, who own Sweet
Home and practice a comparatively benevolent kind of slavery. There, the other
slaves, who are all men, lust after her but never touch her. Their names are
Sixo, Paul D, Paul A, Paul F, and Halle. Sethe chooses to marry Halle,
apparently in part because he has proven generous enough to buy his mother’s
freedom by hiring himself out on the weekends. Together, Sethe and Halle have
two sons, Howard and Buglar, as well as a baby daughter whose name we never
learn. When she leaves Sweet Home, Sethe is also pregnant with a fourth child.
After the eventual death of the proprietor, Mr. Garner, the widowed Mrs. Garner
asks her sadistic, vehemently racist brother-in-law to help her run the farm.
He is known to the slaves as schoolteacher, and his oppressive presence makes
life on the plantation even more unbearable than it had been before. The slaves
decide to run.
Schoolteacher and his nephews anticipate the slaves’ escape,
however, and capture Paul D and Sixo. Schoolteacher kills Sixo and brings Paul
D back to Sweet Home, where Paul D sees Sethe for what he believes will be the
last time. She is still intent on running, having already sent her children
ahead to her mother-in-law Baby Suggs’s house in Cincinnati. Invigorated by the
recent capture, schoolteacher’s nephews seize Sethe in the barn and violate
her, stealing the milk her body is storing for her infant daughter. Unbeknownst
to Sethe, Halle is watching the event from a loft above her, where he lies frozen
with horror. Afterward, Halle goes mad: Paul D sees him sitting by a churn with
butter slathered all over his face. Paul D, meanwhile, is forced to suffer the
indignity of wearing an iron bit in his mouth.
When schoolteacher finds out that Sethe has reported his and
his nephews’ misdeeds to Mrs. Garner, he has her whipped severely, despite the
fact that she is pregnant. Swollen and scarred, Sethe nevertheless runs away,
but along the way she collapses from exhaustion in a forest. A white girl, Amy Denver,
finds her and nurses her back to health. When Amy later helps Sethe deliver her
baby in a boat, Sethe names this second daughter Denver after the girl who
helped her. Sethe receives further help from Stamp Paid, who rows her across
the Ohio River to Baby Suggs’s house. Baby Suggs cleans Sethe up before
allowing her to see her three older children.
Sethe spends twenty-eight wonderful days in Cincinnati, where
Baby Suggs serves as an unofficial preacher to the black community. On the last
day, however, schoolteacher comes for Sethe to take her and her children back
to Sweet Home. Rather than surrender her children to a life of dehumanizing
slavery, she flees with them to the woodshed and tries to kill them. Only the
third child, her older daughter, dies, her throat having been cut with a
handsaw by Sethe. Sethe later arranges for the baby’s headstone to be carved
with the word “Beloved.” The sheriff takes Sethe and Denver to jail, but a
group of white abolitionists, led by the Bodwins, fights for her release. Sethe
returns to the house at 124, where Baby Suggs has sunk into a deep depression.
The community shuns the house, and the family continues to live in isolation.
Meanwhile, Paul D has endured torturous experiences in a
chain gang in Georgia, where he was sent after trying to kill Brandywine, a
slave owner to whom he was sold by schoolteacher. His traumatic experiences
have caused him to lock away his memories, emotions, and ability to love in the
“tin tobacco box” of his heart. One day, a fortuitous rainstorm allows Paul D
and the other chain gang members to escape. He travels northward by following
the blossoming spring flowers. Years later, he ends up on Sethe’s porch in
Cincinnati.
Paul D’s arrival at 124 commences the series of events taking
place in the present time frame. Prior to moving in, Paul D chases the house’s
resident ghost away, which makes the already lonely Denver resent him from the
start. Sethe and Paul D look forward to a promising future together, until one
day, on their way home from a carnival, they encounter a strange young woman
sleeping near the steps of 124. Most of the characters believe that the
woman—who calls herself Beloved—is the embodied spirit of Sethe’s dead
daughter, and the novel provides a wealth of evidence supporting this
interpretation. Denver develops an obsessive attachment to Beloved, and
Beloved’s attachment to Sethe is equally if not more intense. Paul D and
Beloved hate each other, and Beloved controls Paul D by moving him around the
house like a rag doll and by seducing him against his will.
When Paul D learns the story of Sethe’s “rough choice”—her
infanticide—he leaves 124 and begins sleeping in the basement of the local
church. In his absence, Sethe and Beloved’s relationship becomes more intense
and exclusive. Beloved grows increasingly abusive, manipulative, and parasitic,
and Sethe is obsessed with satisfying Beloved’s demands and making her
understand why she murdered her. Worried by the way her mother is wasting away,
Denver leaves the premises of 124 for the first time in twelve years in order
to seek help from Lady Jones, her former teacher. The community provides the
family with food and eventually organizes under the leadership of Ella, a woman
who had worked on the Underground Railroad and helped with Sethe’s escape, in
order to exorcise Beloved from 124. When they arrive at Sethe’s house, they see
Sethe on the porch with Beloved, who stands smiling at them, naked and
pregnant. Mr. Bodwin, who has come to 124 to take Denver to her new job, arrives
at the house. Mistaking him for schoolteacher, Sethe runs at Mr. Bodwin with an
ice pick. She is restrained, but in the confusion Beloved disappears, never to
return.
Afterward, Paul D comes back to Sethe, who has retreated to
Baby Suggs’s bed to die. Mourning Beloved, Sethe laments, “She was my best
thing.” But Paul D replies, “You your best thing, Sethe.” The novel then ends
with a warning that “[t]his is not a story to pass on.” The town, and even the
residents of 124, have forgotten Beloved “like an unpleasant dream during a
troubling sleep.
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