Poet’s Corner- Langston Hughes- “Dream Deferred”
…he, Ezra Benton, Ezra Benton who had had worked,
worked hard, worked his way up from nothing but nigra hot sun beating down
cotton field hand to the assistant plantation blacksmith, the man who shoed the
damn horses when some fool drove the beasts too hard, heard , heard through the
grapevine that now that Atlanta had fallen, had fallen to Sherman and his bummers,
that Father Abraham up in the United
States, up in Washington, D. C. was going to break up Mister’s plantation and
give each nigra family, and maybe others too, maybe some upstart young buck
with ambition, forty acres and a mule to get them started now that slavery days
were falling down. With that news, Ezra, who normally took news from the
grapevine with a grain of salt, no more, got a little wistful. Wistful about
how he would collect his now far- flung family scattered here and there throughout
the delta, take his forty acres and his mule and plow, plow night and day until
the heavens came home, maybe buy some more land, maybe built him a little white
picket fence house like he had seen in town, and mainly make sure that his ever
hungry kin, and his ever hungry own self had enough to eat, and then some. And
so he dreamed…
…he, Brady Benton, son, righteous son of old Ezra
Benton, who had help his father, not some Father Abraham but kin father,
sharecrop Mister’s plantation land, sharecropped and never got ahead, never go
that Ole Abe forty acres, and definitely
did not get any mule, had heard, heard through the nigratown grapevine, that
some nigra in Louisiana had boarded a "whites only" trolley in New Orleans, had
been thrown off because he was “colored” and was actually going to Washington
to have his case heard before the entire United States Supreme Court, all of
them to decide if he could ride that thing or not. With that news, Brady, who normally took news from the grapevine with
a grain of salt, no more, got a little wistful. Wistful about how maybe now
Mister would not be able to take most of the harvest, and most of the little
money left from old daddy’s work. About how he, Brady, might be able to get his
own small farm and provide for his family on his own instead of being bunched
up with daddy. But mainly he thought that from here on in when he went into town,
or anywhere, Mister, or some Mister, would not be able to tell him he could sit
here, but not there, he could walk here, but not there, he could stand here,
but not there, he could eat here, but not there. And so he dreamed…
…he, Leroy, son of
Brady, son of righteous Benson, grandson of old righteous Ezra, had got himself a little
town learning, a little broken-down schoolhouse learning but learning, learning
how to weld stuff together with a torch and so he kind of escaped from the
bottomlands and hot sun that he family had faced for generations. Now that war
had come, a fighting war in Europe between he thought England and Germany, he
had floated north, north up big muddy Mississippi north, when he heard that Chi
town needed, desperately, needed welders, for stuff sent overseas. And once
settled in the Chi town flop house cold- water flat tenements, overpriced,
under-fueled all nigra squeezed in like at home he had heard through the
grapevine, the Division Street grapevine, that the jobs given out were
permanent, to be had for as long as a man, a man can you believe that, wanted
to work. With that news, Leroy, who normally
took news from the grapevine with a grain of salt, no more, got a little
wistful. Got to thinking about bringing
up his wife, Louella, and his kids, maybe even daddy and granddaddy, and
getting that white picket fence house, maybe with some land for a garden, that
old Ezra always kept talking about when he was not muttering some silly stuff
about forty acres and a mule. And so he dreamed…
…he, Daniel,
Daniel, like something out of the Old Testament Bible, son of Leroy, son of
righteous Leroy, grandson of righteous Benson, grand-grandson of the late
patriarch Erza, righteous Ezra of the ever dreaming forty acres, and a veteran,
a twice purple-hearted veterans, European Theater, took advantage of the G.I.
bill and learned the carpentry trade, learned it well, and as well now that he
had moved back south with his extended family took to preaching a little
(although Leroy, Chi town proud, curled his tongue every time Daniel quoted
chapter and verse), a little over at 18th Street Baptist, over on
land that had once belonged to Mister, if you can believe that. And once
everybody was settled in, wife and her family and his, and his carpentry
business was set up and running, he kept hearing rumors, very persistent
rumors, through the nigratown grapevine that Mister, or some Mister, was
thinking about giving the better sort of nigras the vote, if you could believe
that, if you could believe anything Mister said, even if you heard him say it.
With that news, Daniel, who normally took news from the grapevine with a grain
of salt, no more, got a little wistful. Wistful about how if they, the negros had
the right to vote then, maybe, that nigra stand here, that nigra sit there,
that nigra walk over that hill, that nigra eat across that river would finally
be damn done. And so he dreamed…
Harlem [Dream Deferred]
What happens to a dream deferred?
Does it dry up
like a raisin in the sun?
Or fester like a sore—
And then run?
Does it stink like rotten meat?
Or crust and sugar over—
like a syrupy sweet?
Maybe it just sags
like a heavy load.
Or does it explode?
Does it dry up
like a raisin in the sun?
Or fester like a sore—
And then run?
Does it stink like rotten meat?
Or crust and sugar over—
like a syrupy sweet?
Maybe it just sags
like a heavy load.
Or does it explode?
Langston Hughes
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