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Personification In The Negro Speaks Of Rivers

Decent Essays

The Negro Speaks of Rivers In the Langston Hughes’ poem, The Negro Speaks of Rivers the speaker uses a vast amount of personification and a theme of roots or beginnings is shown throughout to express the past of African Americans. He uses personification to bring the rivers to life. Although the word “roots” or “beginnings” is not in the poem, the strong words portray this theme. The speaker uses personification “I’ve known rivers ancient as the world and older than the flow of human blood in human veins” (2-3), to bring the rivers to life. The way the speaker compares the water to “the flow of human blood” (3) creates an image that the river is alive and moving much like a human would. “I built my hut near the …show more content…

The textual details of the poem invoke strong imagery related to veins, rivers. and roots of trees give the reader a sense of the timelessness of these objects. Langston Hughes is able to create two meanings for the theme roots since on the one hand they refer to the deep roots like trees have as well as roots in the family and historical sense. “I heard the singing of the Mississippi when Abe Lincoln went down to New Orleans…” (8-9). The singing of the Mississippi can be referred to as the singing of the slaves in the 1860s. This shows the roots of African Americans in the south and how they would sing throughout the day to demolish the sadness and harshness of their owners. It is clear to the reader that lines such as “I built my hut near the Congo and it lulled me to sleep/ I looked upon the Nile and raised the pyramids above” (6-7), addresses themes that are much larger than simply rivers or human veins, it becomes a statement on the life of African American history as it flourished along the rivers of the world and created firm historical roots. “I’ve known rivers ancient as the world and older than the flow of human blood in human veins” (2-3). The ancient rivers that the speaker talk about are like the blood in veins or the roots under trees because they provide sustenance and can give and support

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