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Marilyn NelsonA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
“A Black Man Talks of Reaping” by Arna Bontemps
In this poem, written in quatrains in three stanzas, a Black man narrates his experience of spending years farming and tilling soil whose fruits he and his sons will never harvest. The narrator is likely a sharecropper, due to his statement that the only evidence of his reaping is “what the hand / can hold at once” (Lines 7-8), meaning that his profits or share of the harvest are small. While the poem takes a tone of resignation, unlike “Chosen,” and narrates Southern Black life in the postbellum world, it relates a similar understanding of how racism impacts generational legacies.
“I, Too” by Langston Hughes
One of Hughes’s best-known poems, “I, Too,” like the Bontemps poem, uses a first-person narrator. This time, the voice is strong, assertive, and not willing to shirk its claim to a nation that he knows is his, too. In the latter regard, Hughes’s narrator is like Diverne: He, however, is better equipped to articulate his claim. While Diverne knows Pomp is a part of her and the white man’s “share of the future” (Line 13), she cannot envision his place within it.
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