Countee Cullen Imitation
There was a time in my home town, While living with sister, mom, and brother I lived a life of innocence Not know I was other.
There are thing we can't control In a world of fear and hate. So some just sit back quietly And try not to tempt fate.
Though I still live here in this town I doubt I am the same No child can stay sweet and pure When called a filthy name.
The above poem is modeled after Countee Cullen's poem "Incident" which deals with a young person's reflection on a period in their life when racism impacted them greatly. "Incident" deals with a narrator who, at the age of eight, visited Baltimore, Maryland and had a traumatic moment with a racist "Baltimorean" (line 3). From the text, it is clear that the child was unfamiliar with this kind of attitude because when he sees the man staring at him, the child's reaction is to smile. In return, the man "poked out / His tongue, and called me, 'Nigger'" (lines 7-8). Once exposed to this kind of hatred, it is impossible for a child to return to a place of ignorance...
African-American Literature -- Compare and Contrast The two stories selected for this first comparison, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl by Harriet Jacobs and the short letter from Jourdon Anderson, "To My Old Master," are both extremely touching, honest, enlightening and historically precious pieces of literature. To begin with, Anderson's letter to Colonel P.H. Anderson reveals a number of key things about the life of a male slave during
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