Langston Hughes 'Poem Life Is Fine'

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Langston Hughes, a significant poet of the Harlem Renaissance, is known for his colorful and insightful portrayals of African American life from the 1920’s to the 1960’s. Hughes frequently addressed issues surrounding the African American community at the time, including violence, white supremacy, and simple, everyday, inequalities. In his poetry, Hughes implemented elements of jazz and blues, including cadence and rhythm involved in the music. Oftentimes, like jazz and blues music, his poems involve themes of loneliness, despair, and humor. Throughout his greatest literary works, Hughes implemented the voices of powerful narrators with specific colloquial language, or diction. In his poem “Life is Fine”, Hughes not only focuses on the mental struggles resulting from racial suppression, but also on common hardships within life’s journey for all of mankind. The speaker of the poem begins in a state of complete despair, and by the end, he/she is able to …show more content…

Hughes passionately portrays life through the eyes of a depressed narrator, and successfully conveys just how sacred an individual’s life is. The rhyme scheme in this poem is a simple A-B-C-B pattern, giving the poem a familiar Hughes’ style rhythm, however, what makes the poem unique, is a simple refrain placed after every two stanzas. Each of these refrains display an overwhelmingly intense emotion the resonates with the end of the preceding stanzas. At the start of the poem, Hughes depicts death as the only escape from reality, however as the poem goes on, the speaker’s perspective evolves. This particular poem extends beyond the everyday struggles of minorities in order to connect all of humanity through commonly faced hardships, such as losing a loved one. Similar to some of his other works, Hughes develops a theme that embodies the resiliency and strength within all human beings, including a willingness to face life’s

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