Character Analysis Of Tea Cake In Their Eyes Were Watching God By Zora Neale

698 Words2 Pages

Tea Cake as a man is not without vices and flaws. Janie is still able to forgive and love him, though, because he genuinely makes her happy; Tea Cake is the realistic version of the idealized man she has envisioned since her awakening under the pear tree of her youth. When Janie first met Tea Cake she mused that he "looked familiar," and from that moment on she shared with him an undeniable connection (Hurston 94). When she continues to get to know him, to play checkers with him, to go hunting, fishing, dancing with him, even Sam Watson comments "she looks might good dese days" (Hurston 111). Tea Cake does little but bring out the good in Janie. He combs through her hair instead of forcing her to tie it up with a rag. He loves how she looks …show more content…

The whispers of warning from her neighbors back in Eatonville become shouts when the two hundred dollars she had secretly pinned to her shirt go missing with Tea Cake one morning. Perhaps he did marry her for her money, she fears, as she distracts herself with the "exercise of searching the room" (Hurston 118). Upon Tea Cake's return, Janie is suspiciously quiet, allowing him to speak for himself and even kiss her "playfully" on the floor before she demands his explanation (Hurston 121). Furthermore, Tea Cake reveals the reason for his sudden disappearance to be a social gathering of his fellow railroad workers and their wives, who he thought Janie would have found offensive since "''dem wuzn't no high muckty mucks'" like the people with whom Janie's wealth and age indicated she may have expected to associate (Hurston 124). Tea Cake is also in the habit of gambling and playing games of dice and cards, another less-than-respectable behavior not expected from Janie's dream man. One would expect Tea Cake, Janie's supposed one true love, to know better than to keep her excluded from less-than-aristocratic gatherings or take her …show more content…

One would also expect Janie to turn her nose up at these traits of Tea Cake, to realize that Tea Cake is no different from her first two husbands in that he is lackluster as marriage partner, but in fact Janie seems to love him all the more because of them. Tea Cake is always able to redeem himself and regain Janie's favor no matter what he has done. When he takes and spends her two hundred dollars without permission, he talks his way around his indiscretion: "'Janie, Ah would have give Jacksonville wid Tampa for a jump-back for you to be dere wid me,'" he soothes sweetly (Hurston 124). Janie proves that she can forgive Tea Cake completely when she chooses to reveal the truth about "the other money she ha[s] in the bank" (Hurston 127). His gambling is "very exciting" to an eager Janie who "had never touched dice in her life" (Hurston 125). Even when she accuses him of cheating on her, the ultimate sacrilege in any marriage, Janie is overwhelmed by his kisses and ends up sleeping with him on the floor. Janie is willing to accept faults in Tea Cake that she would likely have been intolerant of in her prior husbands. Speaking to his gambling, Janie justifies: "It was part of him, so it was all right" (Hurston

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