1. "We thought, at the time,
that it was because Pecola was having her father's baby that the marigolds did
not grow." (p. 5)
Claudia's first narrative
about her childhood, telling about her friend, Pecola, who was pregnant.
2. "Nuns go by as quiet as
lust, and drunken men and sober eyes sing in the lobby of the Greek hotel." (p. 9)
In the autumn of 1941, when
the story begins, the narrator states that people were not what they seemed to
be.
3. "We stare at her, wanting
her bread, but more than that wanting to poke the arrogance out of her eyes and
smash the pride of ownership that curls her chewing mouth." (p. 9)
Claudia's narrative, where
she states that when they were children they hated Rosemary Villanucci, not
because of what she had, but because she felt entitled to the good things in
life because of her social position.
4. "It had occurred to
Pecola some time ago that if her eyes, those eyes that held the pictures, and
knew the sights-if those eyes of hers were different, that is to say,
beautiful, she herself would be different." (p. 46)
The omniscient narrator
states what Pecola believed, that if her eyes were beautiful then her life
would be different.
5. "She looks up at him and
sees the vacuum where curiosity ought to lodge. And something more. The total
absence of human recognition-the glazed separateness." (p. 48)
Pecola looks at the store
owner and notices that he cannot see her as the beautiful child that she is; he
cannot even see her as another human being.
6. "The line between colored
and nigger was not always clear; subtle and telltale signs threatened to erode
it, and the watch had to be constant." (p. 87)
The omniscient narrator
tells the reader how Junior's mother tried to control how people saw him. She
put lotion on his face in the winter, to keep it from appearing ashen.
7. "She was secure and
grateful; he was kind and lively." (p. 116)
The narrator tells us that
Pauline could support herself when she met Cholly and felt grateful just to be
loved, while Cholly was full of life and kind to Pauline.
8. "She was never able,
after her education in the movies, to look at a face and not assign it some
category in the scale of absolute beauty, and the scale was one she absorbed in
full from the silver screen." (p. 122)
Pauline internalized the
white definition of beauty and perceived people as valuable or not in
comparison. She even despised herself because she was not beautiful according
to white standards.
9. "Her simplicity decorated
us, her guilt sanctified us, her pain made us glow with health." (p. 205)
The narrator says that
Pecola's pain and guilt made other people around her feel superior to her.
10. "Certain seeds it will
not nurture, certain fruit it will not bear and when the land kills of its own
volition, we acquiesce and say the victim had no right to live." (p. 206)
The narrator says that
Pecola's baby died because it was hated and viewed as having no right to live.
|