Short summary of "Still Here" by Langston Hughes

                "Still Here" by Langston Hughes 

         Langston Hughes has history of expressing the horrible way African Americans have lived through slavery. His poem " Still Here" focuses on the “rough and terrible conditions the slave has overcome. The poet begins the poem by saying that he has been scared and even punished. (scared and battered). This fear and pain are like a violent wind which has shattered or in other words killed the hope of the Black People.Here it must be noted that the poet uses “I” which rather represents his whole race. And we also find the deliberate misspelling of the words to challenge the White Supremacy. This is a kind of revolt by the Blacks.

       In the next lines, the poet says, Snow has friz me, Sun has baked me. Snow and Sun symbolize two extremes of harshness. According to the poet, the Blacks were frozen or isolated and also beaten up so that they may give up the very hope they had.Other interpretations of these lines can be as follows. According to the poet, the slaves or the Blacks were made to work in all harsh conditions ranging from chilling cold to burning hot which have made the Blacks to never give up the hope of living.

       Next the the poet says that the Whites tried every method to make the slaves give up. In the words of the poet, they done Tried to make me Stop laughin’, stop lovin’, stop livin’. The line means that they have tried to make him or the people of his race to stop laughing, loving or just living. But they don’t care and they are still there having the hope and living their life.

      Thus the poem’s tone and mood changes in the end.Thus the poem can also be considered as an inspirational one that encourages us to never give up under all circumstances.

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