The Explorer And Frederick Douglass Summary

912 Words2 Pages

Pleas for Equality Found in “The Explorer” and “Frederick Douglass”
(Common Struggles Found in the Poetry of Gwendolyn Brooks and Robert Hayden) During the early Twentieth Century in the United States, equality became the elephant in the room, not only for African Americans, but for American women too. Once slaves were emancipated after the American Civil War, it became common amongst the American people to wonder about what the rights of American women should be. This question became more apparent after WWI in the beginning of the Twentieth Century, and still a debatable question after WWII. Gwendolyn Brooks addresses the issue of debate and war in her poem “The Explorer.” Brooks’s poem can be related to war because of the events that happened …show more content…

In the beginning lines of her poem, Brooks states that it is a “frayed inner want…, the frayed hope” to find silence, which relates to all the chaos in the American society, and how hard it was to find the good and peaceful side in people, or society as a whole. Later in the poem she writes about people screaming of their affairs, and that there are fears of the choices people take. When she writes of the fear that there is in the choices that people make, I think back to post Civil Rights Movement era, because African Americans were so exposed when it came down to the choices of the white people. There was a point in America’s history when a white society could do almost anything to an African American that they thought suitable, without even having a reason. All the conflict going on in the United States post Civil Rights Movement and during the Civil Rights Movement was so horrific and vile that it is hard to look back at without being at least a little ashamed, but to be a part of that time period must have been terrifying and stressful because all of that was happening all around you in American society. Wishing for a solution so that there can be peace is what Brooks’s poem, “The Explorer” is, it’s a plea for …show more content…

When African Americans were finally given the same rights as whites had. In Hayden’s first line he says, “When it is finally ours, this freedom, this liberty” these rights have apparently not yet been given to African Americans, but they are longed for. Most of Hayden’s poem is a tribute to Fredrick Douglass himself because he was one of he major influences to beginning the debate in America to make African Americans equals to whites. Douglass was a leading abolitionist during the Nineteenth Century, and his acts then lead on to the freedom that African Americans had in the early half of the Twentieth Century, even though is this poem, Hayden makes us question whether it really was freedom or not. In “Frederick Douglass,” Robert Hayden expresses a demand to notice the need for

Open Document