Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Miss Jane's Oak

Miss Jane's Oak Tree 1960s
Talking about the 1927 Mississippi River flood, Miss Jane Pittman begins to talk about Native Americans and their respect for nature and its strength. In the middle of this discussion, she thinks about "an old oak tree up the quarters where Aunt Lou Bolin and them used to stay" (155). The old tree "up the quarters" became more than just another tree to Miss Jane. It became an avenue for her to communicate with the past and with nature itself. She says:


That tree has been here, I'm sure, since this place been here, and it has seen much much, and it knows much much. And I'm not ashamed to say I've talked to it, and I'm not crazy either. It's not necessary craziness when you talk to trees and rivers. But a different thing when you talk to ditches and bayous. A ditch ain't nothing, and a bayou ain't too much either. But rivers and trees--less, of course, it's a chinaball tree. Anybody caught talking to a chinaball tree or a thorn tree got to be crazy. But when you talk to an oak tree that's been here all these years, and knows more than you'll ever know, it's not craziness; it's just the nobility you respect. (155) 
Near the end of The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman, as Miss Jane and the rest of the people in the quarters head to the front to listen to Robert Sampson discourage them from demonstrating, Miss Jane passes the old oak tree and addresses it:
"Well, Sis Oak, look like another one of them crazy meetings." Yoko said: "One of these days that tree go'n answer you back and go'n break your neck running down them quarters." I told Yoko, I said: "I got news for you, Yoko, she talks back to me all the time." Yoko dead and gone now, said: "Now I know you crazy." And me and Yoko just killed ourself laughing. (232) 
Oak trees can live for a long time. For example, the Seven Sisters Oak in Mandeville, LA is reportedly around 1,500 years old. Other oaks have symbolic significance, like the Emancipation Oak on Hampton University's campus. Both of these aspects of oak trees are important, especially when considering the reverence that Miss Jane gives to the oak tree she communes with. Her "sister" tree has seen a lot, and Miss Jane knows that it will outlive her and everyone she knows, carrying on for future generations. In many ways, Miss Jane is the oak tree for the community.

Miss Jane's Oak Tree ca. 2007
With all of this said, the tree that Miss Jane talks to it based on an actual 400 year old oak tree that sits beside La. 416 in Pointe Coupee Parish. Gaines used to walk by the tree on his way to the grocery store, and it inspired him, partly, to write The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman. In 2008, a car ran into a limb that was twelve feet in circumference that fell from the tree. Because of this the Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development (DOTD) considered cutting the tree down. Once this happened, the community, Gaines, and fellow professors at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette stepped in to protest the tree's imminent demise. The DOTD agreed to have the tree checked to see if it was healthy, and after the inspection, they determined that the tree was healthy. The limb that fell had a defect. So, instead of removing the tree, they trimmed the branches that hung over the road.

"Miss Jane's Oak Tree," the one she speaks with in the novel and the one that inspired Gaines, endures, standing tall even after everyone else and many other things have disappeared through the passage of time. It represents, as Miss Jane says, "nobility."   

Gaines, Ernest J. The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman. New York: Bantam Books, 1972. Print.

1 comment:

  1. Miss Jane Pittman Oak is poetry in emotion to our most inner thoughts

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