32 pages 1 hour read

Langston Hughes

Mother to Son

Fiction | Poem | Adult | Published in 1987

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Related Poems

"The Weary Blues" by Langston Hughes (1925)

One of Hughes’s most famous poems, “The Weary Blues” is an example of Hughes’s jazz poems of the Harlem Renaissance. The poem is set in a bar in Harlem as the speaker observes a pianist playing blues music. The poem creatively utilizes literary devices like rhyme and meter that come together to embody blues as a form and a metaphor. The poem is considered one of the first works of blues performance in literature, and its vivid imagery and language highlight the struggle of life for a Black American man during the mid-1920s.

"If We Must Die" by Claude McKay (1919)

“If We Must Die” by African American poet Claude McKay is a response to racial violence against Black Americans during the Red Summer of 1919, a period after the First World War when white supremacist terrorism and riots took place across the United States, resulting in numerous deaths of African Americans. Although the poem does not mention any specific marginalized group, it is a traditional Shakespearean sonnet that encourages strength and hope against a deadly mob. The poem is considered by some to be the official start to the Harlem Renaissance as a literary movement.

Related Titles

By Langston Hughes

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Children’s Rhymes

Langston Hughes

Children’s Rhymes

Langston Hughes

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Cora Unashamed

Langston Hughes

Cora Unashamed

Langston Hughes

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Dreams

Langston Hughes

Dreams

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Harlem

Langston Hughes

Harlem

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I look at the world

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I look at the world

Langston Hughes

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I, Too

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I, Too

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Let America Be America Again

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Let America Be America Again

Langston Hughes

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Me and the Mule

Langston Hughes

Me and the Mule

Langston Hughes

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Mulatto

Langston Hughes

Mulatto

Langston Hughes

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Mule Bone: A Comedy of Negro Life

Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston

Mule Bone: A Comedy of Negro Life

Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston

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Not Without Laughter

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Not Without Laughter

Langston Hughes

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Slave on the Block

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Slave on the Block

Langston Hughes

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Thank You, M'am

Langston Hughes

Thank You, M'am

Langston Hughes

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The Big Sea

Langston Hughes

The Big Sea

Langston Hughes

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Theme for English B

Langston Hughes

Theme for English B

Langston Hughes

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The Negro Artist and the Racial Mountain

Langston Hughes

The Negro Artist and the Racial Mountain

Langston Hughes

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The Negro Speaks of Rivers

Langston Hughes

The Negro Speaks of Rivers

Langston Hughes

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The Ways of White Folks

Langston Hughes

The Ways of White Folks

Langston Hughes

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The Weary Blues

Langston Hughes

The Weary Blues

Langston Hughes

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Tired

Langston Hughes

Tired

Langston Hughes