If Beale Street Could Talk

by James Baldwin

Fonny (Alonzo Hunt) Character Analysis

A twenty-two-year-old black man in prison because he has been wrongfully accused of raping Mrs. Rogers. Shortly before his arrest, Fonny asks Tish—whom he has known since he was a child—to marry him, and the young couple make plans to start their life together. A sculptor who likes to work with wood and stone, Fonny tells Tish upfront that he won’t be able to provide her with much, though he’ll always remain faithful. Unfortunately, a feud with a racist cop named Officer Bell leads to his imprisonment not long after he and Tish tell their parents their intentions to get married. Officer Bell is eager to take revenge on Fonny because of an altercation that took place between them one evening—an altercation that humiliated Bell in front of a crowd of white people. As such, when Bell hears about Mrs. Rogers’s rape, he claims to have seen Fonny running from the crime scene. Later, when Fonny is in jail, it takes all his effort to remain optimistic, though his spirits are thankfully buoyed by the fact that Tish is pregnant with his child. Knowing he will be a father ultimately helps him maintain a sense of hope, which is good, considering that his own family fails to provide him the support he needs. This is because his mother, Mrs. Hunt, resents him for taking after his father, Frank. As a result, Tish’s family—along with Frank—are the ones who work hard to get him out of jail, even hiring his lawyer, Mr. Hayward. Despite their efforts, though, there’s no changing the fact that the District Attorney’s office does everything it can to rig the trial, even arresting Fonny’s friend Daniel and scaring him into changing his original testimony that he was with Fonny at the time of Mrs. Rogers’s rape. By the end of the novel, Fonny slowly begins to unravel under the pressures of living in prison.

Fonny (Alonzo Hunt) Quotes in If Beale Street Could Talk

The If Beale Street Could Talk quotes below are all either spoken by Fonny (Alonzo Hunt) or refer to Fonny (Alonzo Hunt). For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Love, Support, and Hope Theme Icon
).

Troubled About My Soul Quotes

I hope that nobody has ever had to look at anybody they love through glass.

And I didn’t say it the way I meant to say it. I meant to say it in a very offhand way, so he wouldn’t be too upset, so he’d understand that I was saying it without any kind of accusation in my heart.

Related Characters: Tish (Clementine) (speaker), Fonny (Alonzo Hunt)
Page Number and Citation: 4
Explanation and Analysis:

And I’m not ashamed of Fonny. If anything, I’m proud. He’s a man. You can tell by the way he’s taken all this shit that he’s a man. Sometimes, I admit, I’m scared—because nobody can take the shit they throw on us forever. But, then, you just have to somehow fix your mind to get from one day to the next. If you think too far ahead, if you even try to think too far ahead, you’ll never make it.

Related Characters: Tish (Clementine) (speaker), Fonny (Alonzo Hunt)
Page Number and Citation: 7
Explanation and Analysis:

I can’t say to anybody in this bus, Look, Fonny is in trouble, he’s in jail—can you imagine what anybody on this bus would say to me if they knew, from my mouth, that I love somebody in jail?—and I know he’s never com­mitted any crime and he’s a beautiful person, please help me get him out. Can you imagine what anybody on this bus would say? What would you say? I can’t say, I’m going to have this baby and I’m scared, too, and I don’t want any­ thing to happen to my baby’s father, don’t let him die in prison, please, oh, please! You can’t say that. That means you can’t really say anything. Trouble means you’re alone.

Related Characters: Tish (Clementine) (speaker), Fonny (Alonzo Hunt)
Page Number and Citation: 8
Explanation and Analysis:

Tish […], when we was first brought here, the white man he didn’t give us no preachers to say words over us before we had our babies. And you and Fonny be to­gether right now, married or not, wasn’t for that same damn white man. So, let me tell you what you got to do. You got to think about that baby. You got to hold on to that baby, don’t care what else happens or don’t happen. You got to do that. Can’t nobody else do that for you. And the rest of us, well, we going to hold on to you. And we going to get Fonny out. Don’t you worry. I know it’s hard —but don’t you worry. And that baby be the best thing that ever happened to Fonny. He needs that baby. It going to give him a whole lot of courage.

Related Characters: Sharon (speaker), Fonny (Alonzo Hunt), Tish (Clementine)
Related Symbols: The Baby
Page Number and Citation: 33
Explanation and Analysis:

Though the death took many forms, though people died early in many different ways, the death itself was very simple and the cause was simple, too: as simple as a plague: the kids had been told that they weren’t worth shit and everything they saw around them proved it. They struggled, they struggled, but they fell, like flies, and they congregated on the garbage heaps of their lives, like flies. And perhaps I clung to Fonny, perhaps Fonny saved me because he was just about the only boy I knew who wasn’t fooling around with the needles or drinking cheap wine or mugging people or hold­ing up stores.

Related Characters: Tish (Clementine) (speaker), Fonny (Alonzo Hunt)
Page Number and Citation: 36
Explanation and Analysis:

That same passion which saved Fonny got him into trouble, and put him in jail. For, you see, he had found his center, his own center, inside him: and it showed. He wasn’t anybody’s nigger. And that’s a crime, in this fucking free country. You’re suppose to be somebody's nigger. And if you’re nobody’s nigger, you’re a bad nigger: and that’s what the cops decided when Fonny moved down­ town.

Related Characters: Tish (Clementine) (speaker), Fonny (Alonzo Hunt)
Page Number and Citation: 37
Explanation and Analysis:

I guess you call your lustful action love […]. I don’t. I always knew that you would be the destruction of my son. You have a demon in you—I always knew it. My God caused me to know it many a year ago. The Holy Ghost will cause that child to shrivel in your womb. But my son will be forgiven. My prayers will save him.

Related Characters: Mrs. Hunt (speaker), Fonny (Alonzo Hunt), Frank Hunt, Tish (Clementine)
Page Number and Citation: 69
Explanation and Analysis:

And Mrs. Hunt added, “These girls won’t be bringing me no bastards to feed, I can guarantee you that.”

“But the child that’s coming,” said Sharon, after a moment, “is your grandchild. I don’t understand you. It’s your grandchild. What difference does it make how it gets here? The child ain’t got nothing to do with that—don’t none of us have nothing to do with that!"

Related Characters: Tish (Clementine) (speaker), Ernestine (Sis), Fonny (Alonzo Hunt), Sharon, Mrs. Hunt
Page Number and Citation: 72
Explanation and Analysis:

Time: the word tolled like the bells of a church. Fonny was doing: time. In six months time, our baby would be here. Somewhere, in time, Fonny and I had met: some­ where, in time, we had loved; somewhere, no longer in time, but, now, totally, at time’s mercy, we loved.

Somewhere in time, Fonny paced a prison cell, his hair growing—nappier and nappier. Somewhere, in time, he stroked his chin, itching for a shave, somewhere, in time, he scratched his armpits, aching for a bath. Somewhere in time he looked about him, knowing that he was being lied to, in time, with the connivance of time. In another time, he had feared life: now, he feared death—somewhere in time.

Related Characters: Tish (Clementine) (speaker), Fonny (Alonzo Hunt), Arnold Hayward, Sharon
Page Number and Citation: 95
Explanation and Analysis:

They said—they still say—stole a car. Man, I can’t even drive a car, and I tried to make my lawyer—but he was really their lawyer, dig, he worked for the city—prove that, but he didn’t. And, anyway, I wasn’t in no car when they picked me up. But I had a little grass on me. I was on my stoop. And so they come and picked me up, like that, you know, it was about midnight, and they locked me up and then the next morning they put me in the lineup and somebody said it was me stole the car—that car I ain’t seen yet. And so—you know—since I had that weed on me, they had me anyhow and so they said if I would plead guilty they’d give me a lighter sentence. If I didn’t plead guilty, they’d throw me the book. Well […] I was alone, baby, wasn’t nobody, and so I en­tered the guilty plea. Two years!

Related Characters: Daniel Carty (speaker), Fonny (Alonzo Hunt), Tish (Clementine)
Page Number and Citation: 103
Explanation and Analysis:

Man, it was bad. Very bad. And it’s bad now. Maybe I’d feel different if I had done something and got caught. But I didn’t do nothing. They were just playing with me, man, because they could. And I’m lucky it was only two years, you dig? Because they can do with you whatever they want. Whatever they want. And they dogs, man. I really found out, in the slammer, what Malcolm and them cats was talking about. The white man’s got to be the devil. He sure ain’t a man. Some of the things I saw, baby, I’ll be dreaming about until the day I die.

Related Characters: Daniel Carty (speaker), Fonny (Alonzo Hunt), Tish (Clementine)
Page Number and Citation: 103
Explanation and Analysis:

I know I can’t help you very much right now—God knows what I wouldn’t give if I could. But I know about suffering; if that helps. I know that it ends. I ain’t going to tell you no lies, like it always ends for the better. Some­ times it ends for the worse. You can suffer so bad that you can be driven to a place where you can’t ever suffer again: and that’s worse.

[…]

I don’t want to sound foolish. But, just remember, love brought you here. If you trusted love this far, don’t panic now.

Related Characters: Sharon (speaker), Tish (Clementine), Fonny (Alonzo Hunt)
Page Number and Citation: 112
Explanation and Analysis:

I remembered women I had known, but scarcely looked at, who had frightened me; because they knew how to use their bodies in order to get something that they wanted. I now began to realize that my judgment of these women had had very little to do with morals. (And I now began to wonder about the meaning of this word.) My judgment had been due to my sense of how little they appeared to want. I could not conceive of peddling myself for so low a price.

But, for a higher price? for Fonny?

Related Characters: Tish (Clementine) (speaker), Fonny (Alonzo Hunt)
Page Number and Citation: 113
Explanation and Analysis:

Will you listen to me? Please? Of course, she’s lying. We know she’s lying. But—she’s—not—lying. As far as she’s concerned, Fonny raped her and that’s that, and now she hasn’t got to deal with it anymore. It’s over. For her. If she changes her testimony, she’ll go mad. Or become another woman. And you know how often people go mad, and how rarely they change.

Related Characters: Ernestine (Sis) (speaker), Tish (Clementine), Victoria Rogers, Fonny (Alonzo Hunt), Arnold Hayward
Page Number and Citation: 119
Explanation and Analysis:

It seems to me that if I quit my job, I’ll be making the six o’clock visit forever. I explain this to Fonny, and he says he understands, and, in fact, he does. But understand­ing doesn’t help him at six o’clock. No matter what you understand, you can’t help waiting: for your name to be called, to be taken from your cell and led downstairs. If you have visitors, or even if you have only one visitor, but that visitor is constant, it means that someone outside cares about you. And this can get you through the night, into the day. No matter what you may understand, and really understand, and no matter what you may tell yourself, if no one comes to see you, you are in very bad trouble. And trouble, here, means danger.

Related Characters: Tish (Clementine) (speaker), Fonny (Alonzo Hunt)
Page Number and Citation: 157
Explanation and Analysis:

I know you worried about the money. But you let me worry about that. I got more experience. Anyway, you ain’t making no damn money. All you doing is wearing yourself out, and driving Fonny crazy. You keep on like you going, you going to lose that baby. You lose that baby, and Fonny won’t want to live no more, and you’ll be lost and then I’ll be lost, everything is lost.

Related Characters: Joseph (speaker), Frank Hunt, Fonny (Alonzo Hunt), Tish (Clementine)
Related Symbols: The Baby
Page Number and Citation: 160
Explanation and Analysis:

My presence, which is of no practical value whatever, which can even be considered, from a practical point of view, as a betrayal, is vastly more important than any practical thing I might be doing. Every day, when he sees my face, he knows, again, that I love him—and God knows I do, more and more, deeper and deeper, with every hour. But it isn’t only that. It means that others love him, too, love him so much that they have set me free to be there. He is not alone; we are not alone.

Related Characters: Tish (Clementine) (speaker), Sharon, Ernestine (Sis), Fonny (Alonzo Hunt), Joseph, Frank Hunt
Page Number and Citation: 162
Explanation and Analysis:

Zion Quotes

He cannot tell what time it is, but it does not matter. The hours are all the same, the days are all the same. He looks at his shoes, which have no laces, on the floor beside the cot. […] He knows that he must do something to keep himself from drowning, in this place, and every day he tries. But he does not succeed. He can neither retreat into himself nor step out of himself. He is righteously suspended, he is still. He is still with fear.

Related Characters: Tish (Clementine) (speaker), Fonny (Alonzo Hunt)
Page Number and Citation: 178
Explanation and Analysis:

I opened my mouth to say—I don’t know what. When I opened my mouth, I couldn’t catch my breath. Every­thing disappeared, except my mother’s eyes. An incredible intelligence charged the air between us. Then, all I could see was Fonny. And then I screamed, and my time had come.

Fonny is working on the wood, on the stone, whistling, smiling. And, from far away, but coming nearer, the baby cries and cries and cries and cries and cries and cries and cries and cries, cries like it means to wake the dead.

Related Characters: Tish (Clementine) (speaker), Sharon, Frank Hunt, Fonny (Alonzo Hunt)
Related Symbols: The Baby
Page Number and Citation: 197
Explanation and Analysis:
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Fonny (Alonzo Hunt) Character Timeline in If Beale Street Could Talk

The timeline below shows where the character Fonny (Alonzo Hunt) appears in If Beale Street Could Talk. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Troubled About My Soul
Love, Support, and Hope Theme Icon
Time and Anticipation Theme Icon
Tish, whose real name is Clementine, goes to “the Tombs” in Lower Manhattan to visit Fonny, whose real name is Alonzo. However, she only calls him Alonzo when she has to... (full context)
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Tish thinks about what she’s about to tell Fonny, hoping that once he stops worrying about the news she’s about to deliver, perhaps it... (full context)
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Fonny worries aloud about how they’ll raise a baby when he’s still in prison, but Tish... (full context)
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...people responsible for these jails should be ashamed.” She, for her part, isn’t ashamed of Fonny. In fact, she’s even “proud” of him, since he has confronted this hardship so admirably. (full context)
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Despite the fact that she’s proud of Fonny, Tish often wonders if the pressure of Fonny’s imprisonment might someday become too much to... (full context)
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...her in the first place, since nobody could truly do something to improve her and Fonny’s situation. “I can’t say to anybody in this bus, Look, Fonny is in trouble, he’s... (full context)
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Tish reflects on how she and Fonny first became close. When she was only six years old, Fonny was her neighbor, but... (full context)
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Still narrating the fight she had with Fonny, Tish says that he disappeared for several days, causing her to fear that the rusty... (full context)
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As kids, Fonny and Tish become close after their fight. Fonny, for his part, dislikes his sisters, and... (full context)
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One day as adults, Tish asks Fonny if his parents still make love, and he says they do but that their sex... (full context)
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One day before their romantic relationship begins, Tish goes to church with Fonny and Mrs. Hunt. Her own family isn’t particularly religious, and Tish can sense that Mrs.... (full context)
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Having told Fonny about her pregnancy, Tish goes home to tell her family. She knows her mother, Sharon,... (full context)
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...slaves. Similarly, she says, “that same damn white man” is responsible for the fact that Fonny and Tish aren’t married right now, since they would be if he wasn’t in jail.... (full context)
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...she, Frank, and Ernestine will take care of everything else. What’s more, she adds that Fonny “needs that baby” because it will lend him “courage.” Sharon then says she will be... (full context)
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When Joseph arrives, he pours himself a beer and speculates about how much Fonny’s lawyer will cost. As he and Sharon talk to one another, Tish stares at a... (full context)
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Tish thinks about the fact that Fonny discovered sculpture was something “he could do” to avoid “the death that was waiting to... (full context)
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Judgmental and proper like their mother, Fonny’s sisters Adrienne and Sheila team up against Frank and Fonny, scorning them for their lack... (full context)
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...afraid to lament “the white man’s lying shit.” Now, she talks with her parents about Fonny’s lawyer, whom she found because she works with attorneys as part of her job. As... (full context)
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...I ain’t gone crazy. We’re drinking to a new life. Tish is going to have Fonny’s baby.” (full context)
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...figured.” In contrast, Joseph is shocked, and Tish clarifies that she got pregnant just before Fonny was arrested in March. This fills Joseph with questions, as he realizes that Tish was... (full context)
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Tish thinks about the initial stages of her relationship with Fonny, when she first felt his erection straining through his pants one night and immediately ran... (full context)
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Tish continues to think about the first time she had sex, remembering that she and Fonny left the Spanish restaurant and went to his small apartment in the Village, which was... (full context)
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...pleases him.” She then talks about how she has been speaking to her connections about Fonny’s situation, emphasizing the fact that she knows important people who can “pull some strings,” though... (full context)
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...way that Tish can’t help but jumping in and criticizing her, saying she never visits Fonny in prison. “And you ain’t said a word about it to none of them white-collars... (full context)
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...her mother by saying that nobody should ridicule her faith, and then she suggests that Fonny is good for nothing, saying, “Who is going to take care of this baby?” (full context)
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Tish says once again that she will be responsible for her and Fonny’s child, and then Ernestine threatens Adrienne, saying that if she continues to bother Tish, she’ll... (full context)
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Tish returns to the night she lost her virginity, thinking about how Fonny told her that they’ve always belonged to one another. “I want you to marry me,”... (full context)
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...love, Tish begins to fret that her parents must be worried about her. She and Fonny travel uptown to Harlem. It’s now early morning, and Sharon opens the door, saying, “You’re... (full context)
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On the Monday after Tish visits Fonny in jail, she goes to Mr. Hayward’s office with Sharon. He informs them that Victoria... (full context)
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...clarifies that he thinks Officer Bell is the person who told Mrs. Rogers to accuse Fonny. As he talks about the case, Tish sits in his office and looks at the... (full context)
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Outlining the difficulties of Fonny’s case, Hayward informs Tish and Sharon that Daniel has been arrested by the D.A. and... (full context)
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...succumb to desperation because it will take all the strength she has to help free Fonny. Then, before they leave, Hayward stops Tish and tells her that whenever he visits Fonny... (full context)
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After seeing Hayward, Tish thinks back to before Fonny was arrested. In the memory, Fonny bumps into Daniel on the street after many years... (full context)
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...just playing with me, man, because they could,” he says. As he begins to cry, Fonny urges him to move on, but Daniel says that the guards and prisoners made him... (full context)
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The day after meeting with Hayward, Tish breaks the news to Fonny that Mrs. Rogers has fled. When he hears this, he’s distraught, asking how they’re going... (full context)
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While sleeping that night, Tish has a nightmare about Fonny driving full-speed off of a cliff, and when she wakes up, she sees her mother... (full context)
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...peddling myself for so low a price,” she says. “But, for a higher price? for Fonny?” (full context)
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...her to New York City and having three children with her. Addressing the particulars of Fonny’s case, Tish notes that Officer Bell claimed to see him running from the crime scene,... (full context)
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Tish asks Ernestine why she thinks Mrs. Rogers identified Fonny, and Ernestine states the simple fact that Fonny was “presented to her as the rapist.”... (full context)
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...Joseph and Frank have their own discussion in a separate bar. Talking about how bleak Fonny’s situation is, Joseph insists that he and Frank need to do something. After all, their... (full context)
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Fonny’s trial is repeatedly postponed, as Hayward struggles to do everything he can to keep the... (full context)
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As Fonny waits for his trial, Tish continues to work, though she knows she’ll soon have to... (full context)
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...her a picture of Mrs. Rogers, he asks if she can bring a picture of Fonny, so Tish gives her a photograph of the two of them. Hayward admits that Sharon’s... (full context)
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...night her baby was conceived. Thinking back, she vividly remembers the day, when she and Fonny finally find a loft to rent on Canal Street. The landlord is a nice man... (full context)
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When Tish tries to leave, the man grabs her arm. Just then, Fonny appears and seizes the junkie, giving him a swift beating and leaving him on the... (full context)
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The officer—whose badge reads “Officer Bell”—asks Fonny if he lives in the area, and Fonny tells him his address. Bell then declares... (full context)
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As Fonny and Tish walk away, Fonny hurls the tomatoes at a wall. He then expresses his... (full context)
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Fonny points out that Officer Bell is certainly going to be after him now, especially since... (full context)
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...telling him that she wants to see Victoria Rogers. Unfortunately, he refuses to believe that Fonny is innocent, and he insists that Victoria has been through too much to meet her. (full context)
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...with Pietro, Sharon urges him to consider why, exactly, she would let her daughter marry Fonny if she thought he were a rapist. Still, though, he says that Victoria has “been... (full context)
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...quit her job, wanting to earn as much money as she can to help with Fonny’s legal fees. Because of this, she sometimes misses the evening visiting hours at the Tombs,... (full context)
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...if she keeps tiring herself out, she’ll lose the baby. “You lose that baby, and Fonny won’t want to live no more, and you’ll be lost and then I’ll be lost,... (full context)
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Now that Tish is no longer working, she visits Fonny two times every day. Fonny is overjoyed, and Tish realizes that her “presence” is much... (full context)
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...Mrs. Rogers tacitly admits who she is, and Sharon tells her that she’s come because Fonny is an innocent man. Saying this, she hands Mrs. Rogers the photograph of Tish and... (full context)
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...at the ocean, they talk about Mrs. Rogers’s rape, and Sharon insists that she knows Fonny would never do such a thing, though Mrs. Rogers remains unconvinced and sticks to her... (full context)
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...their first encounter. On one particular night during this period, she’s on her way to Fonny’s and becomes tense when she sees Bell approaching her, since she’s carrying a package of... (full context)
Zion
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Fonny dreams that he’s in his apartment working on a sculpture. “Fonny is working on the... (full context)
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Fonny asks Tish if she’s seen Frank, and she says he’s been working a lot but... (full context)
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...of course, means that the prosecution has lost its “principal witness,” but Tish knows that Fonny’s case is still a difficult one, especially since Daniel has been taken to a prison... (full context)
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...“the City” wants to delay the trial until Mrs. Rogers reappears and can testify, meaning Fonny will continue to languish in jail. As the two men speak in the kitchen, Adrienne... (full context)
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...at his daughters, telling them that they would be out selling themselves to pay for Fonny’s legal fees if they truly cared about him. As he does this, Joseph watches Adrienne... (full context)
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The next day, Tish tells Fonny that his trial has been postponed yet again, and he takes it in stride. “It... (full context)
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Fonny’s bail is finally set, but it’s incredibly expensive. One day, Tish comes back from the... (full context)
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...in her thoughts, Sharon says Ernestine has managed to drum up the necessary money for Fonny’s bail. As she explains this, Joseph comes home, and as he says something to Sharon,... (full context)
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Fonny is working on the wood,” Tish narrates, depicting a scene in which Fonny toils over... (full context)