Their Eyes Were Watching God Love

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In Zora Neale Hurston’s, “Their Eyes Were Watching God,” she expresses Janie’s home in many different ways. The saying, “You can leave home all you want, but home will never leave you,” simply suggests that home is a certain feeling or state of being. When it comes to Janie, home for her would be anytime she felt free, loved, or accepted which ties into the novel as a whole; anything the characters worried about or hoped for they looked unto God. Janie marries Logan Killicks for Nanny’s peace of mind, not because she truly loved him; she yearned for love. “Ah wants things sweet wid mah marriage lak when you sit under a tree and think. Ah..,” Janie complains because what she describes love as, is not what she’s receiving from her current marriage. This doesn't discourage her, she hopes for a better future and has faith that she’ll get her “pear tree”. Having hope and faith was a place of serenity for her; it kept Janie going and it’s a peace inside that creates that feeling of home. Hope is a strong force that can make any bad situation or circumstance seem possible; Janie kept working on the farm for Killicks and Nanny, looking towards the horizon. …show more content…

According to the text, “A feeling of sudden newness and change came over her...even if Joe wasn’t there waiting for her, the change was bound to do her good.” At this point Janie decides to run away with Jody and leave Logan because, that hope she had for a better love was a fuel that keeps her going. Jody turned out to be a self-absorbed bad guy that mistreated her and didn't love her the way she wanted. She felt caged up being with him and restricted to only live from the top of her head to the soles of her feet. This was continuous until Jody died; Janie was free again and her hope for love was what kept her sane. “Tain’t dat Ah worries over Joe’s death, Pheoby. Ah jus’ loves dis

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