Pauline and Cholly continue their abusive relationship with bickering fights, even as time passes. When she told cholly he surprised her by being pleased. He began to drink less and come home more often.
They became more like into a relationship like the first days they were married. Was when she was in the picture show. She would see how white men take such good care of women.
And that the women were all dressed up in big houses with the bathtubs right in the same room. Pauline is pleased with her new baby, Pecola, but knows the baby is ugly. Pauline regarded it as a pleasurable experience, but not any more. It used to make her feel strong, pretty, and young. Cholly would always come home drunk, which she hated. As a child Pauline was never bothered by anyone or anything. Pauline would take care of the house. But she began to be less enthusiastic about work.
She began to want love. Pauline and Cholly first met when Pauline was leaning idly on the fence. Cholly came up whistling and began to tickle her broken foot and kiss her leg. Cholly began to leave Pauline alone more often. Cholly was pleased. He drank less and came home more often. They eased back into a relationship like the early days.
Pauline says Cholly did touch her firmly but gently, just as she had dreamed. She was secure and grateful, he was kind and lively.
She had simple pleasures and wanted more attention than what she showed. Pauline and Cholly first met when Pauline, was walking by and heard him whistle. This led Cholly to woo her by tickling her foot and giving her the love she wanted for herself. She then grew lonely and very dependent on Cholly to pick up her reassurance of herself.
As time passed Cholly and Pauline grew tired of each other and searched for refuge with other people. Pauline started to become judge mental, and Cholly became the drunk that she hoped she could save.
When Pauline told Cholly that she was pregnant he became his old self and begun to be the person he use to be; nice, caring and sympathetic. Pauline was truly happy when she found a place she fit in, and a place where they appreciated all the little things she did to make the house she always dreamed of beautiful. Pauline regards sex with her husband pleasurable at first when she says she saw all the colors, and felt all the colors that she loved and cherished.
She enjoys arranging things, creating order and neatness out of clutter. Her family later migrates to Kentucky, where they move into a sizable house with a garden.
Pauline is put in charge of caring for the house and her two younger siblings, Chicken and Pie. She enjoys this life, but once she turns fifteen, she becomes restless and melancholy. She begins to dream of a stranger, a man, or a god who will take her away with him. Pauline is standing in the garden and hears a young man whistling. Suddenly she feels him tickling her bad foot and turns to meet the gaze of Cholly Breedlove.
They fall in love, and he treats her with tenderness. He has drinking problems. Cholly is happy and their marriage improves.
It surprised me. I mean the pregnancy just sparked up their marriage. Pauline regards sex with her husband as a pleasurable experience in the first stages of their marriage. It was like rainbows. Well as a child she got hurt in her foot whch was left as an injury for life. Then everything was typically normal. She went to school and once old enough left to take care of the household. Pauline and Cholly first met in Kentucky when she was outside cleaning the flour from under the nails.
She heard his whistling and he was getting closer until he was right besides her. He tickled and kissed her foot and when she saw him she liked him a lot. They went from always talking to little or no talking at all sometimes. Cholly was never home to keep her company anymore. He started treating her bad. He got meaner and meaner and they eventually started to fight. The fights started as little agruements over simple things but soon became physical fighting.
When Pauline told Cholly about her pregnancy he was happy. He even changed a little. He drank less and began to care for Pauline again. I was a little suprised because I expected him to treat her bad. I believe Pauline was truly happy when she went to work for the Fisher family. Forever afterward, she walks with a slight limp, and she believes that this accident determined her destiny.
During her childhood, she is isolated from other family members, and therefore cultivates her own pleasures. She enjoys arranging things, creating order and neatness out of clutter.
Her family later migrates to Kentucky, where they move into a sizable house with a garden. Pauline is put in charge of caring for the house and her two younger siblings, Chicken and Pie. She enjoys this life, but once she turns fifteen, she becomes restless and melancholy. She begins to dream of a stranger—a man, or a god—who will take her away with him. Then one day, a stranger arrives. Pauline is standing in the garden and hears a young man whistling.
Suddenly she feels him tickling her bad foot and turns to meet the gaze of Cholly Breedlove. They fall in love, and he treats her with tenderness.
They decide to marry and move up north to Lorain, Ohio, where there are more jobs. They relieved the tiresomeness of poverty, gave grandeur to the dead rooms. The little girl in pink started to cry. Breedlove turned to her. Come here. Oh, Lord, look at your dress. Polly will change it. Over her shoulder she spit out words to us like rotten pieces of apple.
But to find out the truth about how dreams die, one should never take the word of the dreamer. The end of her lovely beginning was probably the cavity in one of her front teeth. She is often cruel, cold, and aloof to Pecola as she looks at her daughter's eyes and sees only ugliness. Saddled with an alcoholic husband, a rootless son, and an ugly daughter, Pauline turns to a picture-perfect white family for happiness and fulfillment.
Transforming herself into the white family's "perfect servant," she becomes Polly, parroting the Fishers' white attitudes and even consoling the little pink-and-white Fisher girl at the expense of her own confused and injured daughter's feelings.
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