He lingers around the town for a while and every day he and Janie meet secretly. Finally, after about two weeks of clandestine flirtation, he says that he wants her to leave Logan and marry him. That night, Janie and Logan fight. He again calls her spoiled and she mentions the possibility of running off. Feeling threatened, Logan responds desperately by insulting and belittling Janie. The next morning, they argue more.
Logan orders her to help with the farm work; Janie says that he expects her to worship him but that she never will. Logan then breaks down, cursing her and sobbing. Afterward, Janie leaves to meet Jody at an agreed-upon time and place. They marry at the first opportunity and set out for the new town. The conversation between Janie and Nanny in Chapter 3 neatly demonstrates the difference between their respective worldviews. For Nanny, relationships are a matter of pragmatism: Logan Killicks makes a good husband because he is well-off, honest, and hard-working.
Janie gets a good send-off into marriage, and she and her new husband ride away in Logan's wagon to his lonely home. The farm apparently is adjacent to the road, but the house is set back, almost in the woods, and for Janie, it is a dreary place. After three months' time, Janie comes to visit Nanny at Mrs. Washburn's, arriving just as Nanny is making some beaten biscuits. Love has not come into Janie's marriage as she thought it would.
She had convinced herself before the wedding that husbands and wives come to love each other, but it is not happening. Nanny can't give the young bride the advice she seeks. But, they keep the part about her father attempting to marry her mother hush-hush. However, Nanny does her best to give Janie all the advantages she can. She even buys her own land and house. We flash forward, and Janie is now 16 years old and discovering the phenomenon of sex for the first time.
While lying out under a blossoming pear tree, Janie witnesses a bee pollinating a pear blossom and describes it as a sexual experience. She envies the tree. She looks out the window just in time to see Johnny and Janie in a lip-lock.
Nanny pronounces that Janie is now a woman and tells her to get married as soon as possible. Next Chapter Removing book from your Reading List will also remove any bookmarked pages associated with this title. Are you sure you want to remove bookConfirmation and any corresponding bookmarks? My Preferences My Reading List.
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