MOTHER TO SON: VIDEO PRESENTATION ‘Mother to Son’ is an ecstatic poem composed by Langston Hughes. The poem is structured in a form of a conversation between a mother and her son. Hughes assures her son that her life wasn’t crystal stair‚ she also had to face several struggles in her life. Hence‚ she commands her son not to look back and keep climbing higher in life even if he thinks climbing is hard. He should try not to fall and climb the stairway of success without any fear because his mother
Premium Family Mother Marriage
“Mother to Son” The speaker of the poem “Mother to Son‚” by Langston Hughes is a mother who is giving advice to her son. Her life has been difficult and hard at times. As readers‚ we know this because the speaker talks about how life is a staircase and her staircase has had “tacks and splinters in it” (line 3-4). This means that her life has not been perfect and she had many challenges to deal with. Perhaps she was born into poverty‚ because the images in her poem reveal a ragged‚ old staircase
Premium African American Langston Hughes Zora Neale Hurston
development. However‚ many American’s remember the time as an age of dramatic social and political change. For many‚ this time brought more conflict than celebration as is referenced in a poem named “Mother to Son” by Langston Hughes. In this poem‚ Hughes writes through the voice of an older mother‚ making the comparison of her life as like a staircase. He writes with the same slang as one might hear in the Southern United States or possible from someone who might not have been through proper
Premium Stairway Climbing
In the poem Hughes uses the device of an extended metaphor to describe the life of the mother. The extended metaphor compares the mother’s life to a staircase. The line “Life for me ain’t been no crystal stair” begins and ends the poem. With this line‚ Hughes quickly establishes for the reader that the speaker in the poem has not had an easy life. The concept of a crystal staircase gives the reader the impression of complete opulence. Who might be the type of person whose life is compared to a
Premium Logic Family Meaning of life
poem I selected “Mother to Son” was written by the great African American poet Langston Hughes. Langston Hughes was born in 1902 in Joplin‚ Missouri‚ and grew up in Lawrence‚ Kansas‚ also living in Ohio‚ Illinois‚ and Mexico. He entered Columbia University‚ and upon leaving there in 1922 he worked on a freighter down the west coast of Africa and lived for several months in Paris before returning to the United States late in 1924. In his poem “Mother to Son”‚ Hughes compares a mother sharing her experiences
Premium Langston Hughes Family African American
.Description Paper.docxAdd to DriveEdit onlineDownload originalShareYou are using a version of Internet Explorer which is unsupported. Some features may not work correctly. Please update your browseror try Google Chrome.Dismiss FileViewHelp Mother vs. Son When thinking of conflict‚ many think of violence or hate. Although‚ according to Wilmot and Hocker‚ conflict is simply a “struggle over values and claims to scarce status‚ power‚ and resources in which the aims of the opponents
Premium Conflict Criticism Conflict theory
The poem “Mother to Son” by Langston Hughes is one of the examples which explain how difficult climbing the up in the life is. Hughes uses a hidden metaphor-meaning in which he compares the living a life and climbing the opposite of crystal stair. In the poem‚ mother to son says “I’se still climbin’‚ And life for me ain’t been no crystal stair” meaning there is no person on the world whose life is always easy (Hughes‚ “Mot. to Son” line 19-20). Mother tries to deliver the message to her son that he
Premium African American Black people Race
The poem‚ ¨Mother to Son¨ by Langston Hughes depicts a mother talking to her son about how life treated her and how he should treat it in return. In the first stanza of the poem‚ it says ¨Life for me ain’t been no crystal stair. It’s had tacks in it. And splinters‚ And boards torn up...¨ This can be seen as the mother’s life has not been sunshine and lollipops‚ but it was filled with pain and heartbreak. With these emotions coming in throughout the good and the bad times‚ sometimes it may want you
Premium Family Poetry Love
Tyler Sanchez English 6th hour 9/26/12 Poem analysis Mending Wall Stone. Hunter. Wall. Savage. These are all words that are used to describe the speaker and his neighbor. Are these words that you would use to describe your neighbor? To describe yourself? Robert Frost is bringing up the subject of two neighbors talking in the springtime. In his poem‚ “Mending Wall‚” Robert Frost writes: “Good fences make good neighbors”. There are two tones in this poem. One tone is the
Premium
McPhail‚ Courtney 1 Courtney McPhail Professor Berke English 1102 17 September 2012 The Imagery of “Mending Wall” The boulders fall silently as nature begins to tear down man’s creation. In Robert Frosts poem “Mending Wall” the author offers lots of imagery to describe the walls human beings put up not only to physically separate themselves but also mentally. The two characters in this poem are described as two opposite beings not only in what is grown on their land but also expresses
Premium The Wall Human Pine