Clarity In Langston Hughes's Work

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The best ways of word-weaving, of course, are those that combine music, meaning and clarity in a pattern of social force. One's own creative talents must supply the music of the words, one's background and experience, the meaning, and one's ability to study and understand, the clarity…to understand being the chief of these qualities toward clarity.” (85)
This could be taken as a “manifesto” to be followed by a would-be artist. The relationship between the rhythms of the poem and the rhythms of life is paramount to his poetry. Langston Hughes was explicit about whose rhythm and whose emotions should make up poetry: “What makes any culture interesting is the individuality of the regional or tribal background. It is the duty of the artist, writer, musician or sculptor, to strive to use much local color in his works” (115). Hughes’s many …show more content…

Hughes stated: “To these themes the Negro artist can give his racial individuality, his heritage of rhythm and warmth, and his incongruous humor that so often as in the Blues, becomes ironic laughter mixed with tears” (36). Thus, it is conceivable that he emphasized a vital, symbiotic relationship between the poet and his society.
Furthermore, Hughes believed that he did not write in “highly conventional” (65) form; he was against the idea of poetry written about “ivory towers, to your head in the clouds, feet floating off the earth” (66). Milton Meltzer made a cursory analysis of what Hughes meant by "conventional". He commented:
“The conventional poet's beauty and lyricism were not for him. They were really related to another world; Hughes's argument against ivory tower worlds speaks chiefly against the attitude of retreat characterized by a preoccupation with lofty, remote, or intellectual thoughts and language.” (Peck and Howard

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