Read Selected Poems of Langston Hughes Online
Authors: Langston Hughes
He ain’t smart
.
That cat’s a fool
.
Naw, he ain’t neither.
He’s a good man,
except that he talks too much.
In fact, he’s a great cat.
But when he drinks,
he drinks fast.
Sometimes
he don’t drink
.
True,
he just
lets his glass
set there.
A woman standing in the doorway
Trying to make her where-with-all:
Come here, baby, darlin’!
Don’t you hear me call?
If I was anybody’s sister,
I’d tell her, Gimme a place to sleep
.
But I ain’t nobody’s sister.
I’m just a poor lost sheep.
Mary, Mary, Mary,
Had a little lamb.
Well, I hope that lamb of Mary’s
Don’t turn out like I am.
Shadow faces
In the shadow night
Before the early dawn
Bops bright.
There’s been an eagle on a nickel,
An eagle on a quarter, too.
But there ain’t no eagle
On a dime.
They worshipped Joe.
A school teacher
whose hair was gray
said:
Joe has sense enough to know
He is a god
.
So many gods don’t know
.
“They say”…“They say”…“They say”…
But the gossips had no
“They say”
to latch onto
for Joe.
Mingled
breath and smell
so close
mingled
black and white
so near
no room for fear.
We’re related—you and I,
You from the West Indies,
I from Kentucky.
Kinsmen—you and I,
You from Africa,
I from the U.S.A.
Brothers—you and I.
The Jews:
Groceries
Suits
Fruits
Watches
Diamond rings
THE DAILY NEWS
Jews sell me things.
Yom Kippur, no!
Shops all over Harlem
close up tight that night.
Some folks blame high prices on the Jews.
(Some folks blame too much on Jews.)
But in Harlem they don’t answer back,
Just maybe shrug their shoulders,
“What’s the use?”
What’s the use
in Harlem?
What’s the use?
What’s the Harlem
use in Harlem
what’s the lick?
Hey!
Baba-re-bop!
Mop!
On a be-bop kick!
Sometimes I think
Jews must have heard
the music of a
dream deferred.
Cheap little rhymes
A cheap little tune
Are sometimes as dangerous
As a sliver of the moon.
A cheap little tune
To cheap little rhymes
Can cut a man’s
Throat sometimes.
He rose up on his dying bed
and asked for fish.
His wife looked it up in her dream book
and played it.
Tinkling treble,
Rolling bass,
High noon teeth
In a midnight face,
Great long fingers
On great big hands,
Screaming pedals
Where his twelve-shoe lands,
Looks like his eyes
Are teasing pain,
A few minutes late
For the Freedom Train.
What happens to a dream deferred?
Does it dry up
like a raisin in the sun?
Or fester like a sore—
And then run?
Does it stink like rotten meat?
Or crust and sugar over—
like a syrupy sweet?
Maybe it just sags
like a heavy load.
Or does it explode?
Good morning, daddy!
I was born here, he said,
watched Harlem grow
until colored folks spread
from river to river
across the middle of Manhattan
out of Penn Station
dark tenth of a nation,
planes from Puerto Rico,
and holds of boats, chico,
up from Cuba Haiti Jamaica,
in buses marked New York
from Georgia Florida Louisiana
to Harlem Brooklyn the Bronx
but most of all to Harlem
dusky sash across Manhattan
I’ve seen them come dark
wondering
wide-eyed
dreaming
out of Penn Station—
but the trains are late.
The gates open—
Yet there’re bars
at each gate.
What happens
to a dream deferred?
Daddy, ain’t you heard?
I said to my baby,
Baby, take it slow.
I can’t, she said, I can’t!
I got to go!
There’s a certain
amount of traveling
in a dream deferred
.
Lulu said to Leonard,
I want a diamond ring.
Leonard said to Lulu,
You won’t get a goddamn thing!
A certain
amount of nothing
in a dream deferred
.
Daddy, daddy, daddy,
All I want is you.
You can have me, baby—
but my lovin’ days is through.
A certain
amount of impotence
in a dream deferred
.
Three parties
On my party line—
But that third party,
Lord, ain’t mine!
There’s liable
to be confusion
in a dream deferred
.
From river to river,
Uptown and down,
There’s liable to be confusion
when a dream gets kicked around.
You talk like
they don’t kick
dreams around
downtown.
I expect they do—
But I’m talking about
Harlem to you!
Dear Mama
,
Time I pay rent and get my food
and laundry I don’t hare much left
but here is five dollars for you
to show you I still appreciates you
.
My girl-friend send her love and say
she hopes to lay eyes on you sometime in life
.
Mama, it has been raining cats and dogs up
here. Well, that is all so I will close
.
Your son baby
Respectably as ever
,
Joe
Between two rivers,
North of the park,
Like darker rivers
The streets are dark.
Black and white,
Gold and brown—
Chocolate-custard
Pie of a town.
Dream within a dream
,
Our dream deferred
.
Good morning, daddy!
Ain’t you heard?
I, too, sing America.
I am the darker brother.
They send me to eat in the kitchen
When company comes,
But I laugh,
And eat well,
And grow strong.
Tomorrow,
I’ll be at the table
When company comes.
Nobody’ll dare
Say to me,
“Eat in the kitchen,”
Then.
Besides,
They’ll see how beautiful I am
And be ashamed—
I, too, am America.
I read in the papers about the
Freedom Train.
I heard on the radio about the
Freedom Train.
I seen folks talkin’ about the
Freedom Train.
Lord, I been a-waitin’ for the
Freedom Train!
Down South in Dixie only train I see’s
Got a Jim Crow car set aside for me.
I hope there ain’t no Jim Crow on the Freedom Train,
No back door entrance to the Freedom Train,
No signs FOR COLORED on the Freedom Train,
No WHITE FOLKS ONLY on the Freedom Train.
I’m gonna check up on this
Freedom Train.
Who’s the engineer on the Freedom Train?
Can a coal black man drive the Freedom Train?
Or am I still a porter on the Freedom Train?
Is there ballot boxes on the Freedom Train?
When it stops in Mississippi will it be made plain
Everybody’s got a right to board the Freedom Train?
Somebody tell me about this
Freedom Train!
The Birmingham station’s marked COLORED and WHITE.
The white folks go left, the colored go right—
They even got a segregated lane.
Is that the way to get aboard the Freedom Train?
I got to know about this
Freedom Train!
If my children ask me,
Daddy, please explain
Why there’s Jim Crow stations for the Freedom Train?
What shall I tell my children? …
You
tell me—
’Cause freedom ain’t freedom when a man ain’t free.
But maybe they explains it on the
Freedom Train.
When my grandmother in Atlanta, 83 and black,
Gets in line to see the Freedom,
Will some white man yell,
Get back!
A Negro’s got no business on the Freedom Track!
Mister, I thought it were the
Freedom Train!
Her grandson’s name was Jimmy. He died at Anzio.
He died for real. It warn’t no show.
The freedom that they carryin’ on this Freedom Train,
Is it for real—or just a show again?
Jimmy wants to know about the
Freedom Train.
Will
his
Freedom Train come zoomin’ down the track
Gleamin’ in the sunlight for white and black?
Not stoppin’ at no stations marked COLORED nor WHITE,
Just stoppin’ in the fields in the broad daylight,
Stoppin’ in the country in the wide-open air
Where there never was no Jim Crow signs nowhere,
No Welcomin’ Committees, nor politicians of note,
No Mayors and such for which colored can’t vote,
And nary a sign of a color line—
For the Freedom Train will be yours and mine!
Then maybe from their graves in Anzio
The G.I.’s who fought will say,
We wanted it so!
Black men and white will say,
Ain’t it fine?
At home they got a train that’s yours and mine!
Then I’ll shout,
Glory for the
Freedom Train!
I’ll holler, Blow your whistle
,
Freedom Train!
Thank God-A-Mighty! Here’s the
Freedom Train!
Get on board our Freedom Train!
Sometimes there’s a wind in the Georgia dusk
That cries and cries and cries
Its lonely pity through the Georgia dusk
Veiling what the darkness hides.
Sometimes there’s blood in the Georgia dusk,
Left by a streak of sun,
A crimson trickle in the Georgia dusk.
Whose blood? … Everyone’s.
Sometimes a wind in the Georgia dusk
Scatters hate like seed
To sprout its bitter barriers
Where the sunsets bleed.
Get out the lunch-box of your dreams.
Bite into the sandwich of your heart,
And ride the Jim Crow car until it screams
Then—like an atom bomb—it bursts apart.
The folks with no titles in front of their names
all over the world
are raring up and talking back
to the folks called Mister.
You say you thought everybody was called Mister?
No, son, not everybody.
In Dixie, often they won’t call Negroes Mister.
In China before what happened
They had no intention of calling coolies Mister.
Dixie to Singapore, Cape Town to Hong Kong
the Misters won’t call lots of other folks Mister.
They call them, Hey George!
Here, Sallie!
Listen, Coolie!
Hurry up, Boy!
And things like that.