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Langston HughesA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
The poem’s narrative structure—with the speaker’s attention moving from river to river, era to era—implies a parallel between rivers and time. Indeed, rivers and time are often compared to one another: Both always steadily flow in one direction. The poem begins at the beginning of the day, at the beginning of time, and opens with the speaker stating he knows rivers that are as old as the earth and older than humanity. He bathed in the oldest river, the Euphrates, “when dawns were young” (Line 4), and by the end of the poem, his chronicle has moved through time and space to the Mississippi, where “its muddy bosom turn[ed] all golden in the sunset” (Line 7) when Abraham Lincoln sailed down the river to New Orleans in the 1800s. Even though this poem covers an expanse of human history, it does so in a way that integrates those expansive elements, as techniques like repetition and parallelism unite the disparate times and locations while the extended metaphor of rivers builds.
Most scholars maintain there is complexity and ambiguity in the poem’s speaker, who is both personal and collective, both literal and figurative, both autobiographical and historical: The poet himself is the speaker insofar as Hughes expresses a sense of personal identity through the poem, yet the “I” transcends his individual
By Langston Hughes
Children’s Rhymes
Langston Hughes
Cora Unashamed
Langston Hughes
Dreams
Langston Hughes
Harlem
Langston Hughes
I look at the world
Langston Hughes
I, Too
Langston Hughes
Let America Be America Again
Langston Hughes
Me and the Mule
Langston Hughes
Mother to Son
Langston Hughes
Mulatto
Langston Hughes
Mule Bone: A Comedy of Negro Life
Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston
Not Without Laughter
Langston Hughes
Slave on the Block
Langston Hughes
Thank You, M'am
Langston Hughes
The Big Sea
Langston Hughes
Theme for English B
Langston Hughes
The Negro Artist and the Racial Mountain
Langston Hughes
The Ways of White Folks
Langston Hughes
The Weary Blues
Langston Hughes
Tired
Langston Hughes