What Does Arna Bontemps Mean

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Through his use of a metaphor and symbolism throughout, Arna Bontemps helps the reader envision how African Americans are being awarded for less than their equal share. In the poem, Bontemps compares the struggle of the African American people to that of farming. He describes how he “scattered seed enough to plant the land/ in rows from Canada to Mexico”(L9-10), and worked hard to tend to his crop. He expects that he will receive his fair share, however he is severely shorted by the white man who takes all the best fruit, while he is left with the remaining scraps. The obvious connection is that African Americans are actually getting paid less for their hard work, whether it be as a laborer in the north, working on railroads, or as a cotton …show more content…

At the start of the poem, the tone starts out fearful about the upcoming harvest with the speaker saying, “ I planted deep within my heart for fear/ that wind and fowl would take the grain away”(L2-3). By his word choice it’s obvious that he is nervous and afraid of the outcome, but he also says “I planted safe against this stark, lean year”(L4) Although he likely expects the outcome of the harvest will not be in his favor, he seems to have a glimmer of hope, that with hard work and wise decisions, he might get a fair share of the harvest. As the poem progresses, the white man takes all the best fruit for himself, leaving the African Americans with nothing. The tone shifts to acceptance and despair, as the speaker says, “Yet what I sowed and what the orchard yields, my brother’s sons are gathering stalk and root”(L9-10)The speaker appears despaired over the inevitable loss of his crop, but also accepting that the white man will always take it and that there is nothing he can do about it. It almost seems as if he isn’t the first one to experience this and that his descendants have had to deal with the same injustice. By showing how submissive this farmer is after years of mistreatment and getting less than the white man, it might inspire a black reader to think that accepting an unfair outcome, hoping that one day they will be treated fairly, doesn’t work. Through the tone it gives people an example of what you can’t do, and to rise up and take a more effective action against the injustice of not just the farmer but of every African American in the

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