892 Matching Annotations
  1. Nov 2019
    1. sturdy back

      Not the stereotypical american description for women; reveals a strength in black women that is discussed further, later on in the poem and the physical labor that African women are more subjected to then American women.

    2. chill'd

      Shortened version of "Chilled." Possible reasoning of this grammar choice: To conjure the use of "Black Vernacular" further suggesting that Wheatley is the speaker because it was in common use during her lifetime and not likely of Madgett to use it herself.

    3. mascot

      Mascot could refer to the fact that, "The Wheatley family would often flaunt Phillis' skills in front of company," showing her off for her literary talents. The Wheatley family is who sponsored all of Phillis's poetry publications.

    4. Sur/vive sur/vive sur/vive!"

      She is using this illusion of the waves being tribal drums to find motivation, strength, and reason to keep fighting. The slash in-between "Sur" and "Vive" represents the break in syllable, each one representing a beat on the drum/a pound on the shipside.

    5. now

      Reveals this poem's setting takes place in Wheatley's adulthood because the last time Wheatley would have seen her mom is when she was 8 years old, before she was taken into slavery.

      *We understand Wheatley herself is the poet by later lines

    6. mended Depression-weary clothes

      In her autobiography, "Pilgrim Journey" Madgett describes her mother: "After Mama was finished in the kitchen, she brought whichever visitor was there that night upstairs where she mended something..." referring to her mom being willing help anyone emotionally in need (possibly battling mental health) and physically in need (something they own is torn), by housing them for the night and mending their clothing.

    7. sober ways.

      Associated with the previously mentioned, "depression-weary clothes", "sagging spirit", and "quiet elegance," "sober ways" most likely refers to her mother's solemn and humble attitude. Further exemplifying Madgett's desire for recognition.*

      *See "Seeking his favor"

    8. the wind that bore him high into the sunlight emanated from your breath

      Referencing to the first stanza's sun-verses-shadow analogy, Madgett depicts her mother as wind to reveal her belief that her father was so great only because her mother made him great.

    9. daily sustenance

      "Give us our daily bread" is a quote from The Lord's Prayer, commonly recited in Christian churches. Because she is referring to her mother, she elevates her mother's status to that of the divine in the ultimate form of praise.

    1. the permanent smell of gun powder

      The Duke played many cowboy roles during his acting career. The roles were very racist, especially against Native Americans. The gunpowder line may referencing his cowboy roles in the movie industry.

    1. Now can’t we all get along?

      This suggests that king has come to terms with what has happened to him, but as mentioned earlier, he values love over all, and wants to move past it and use his experience as advocacy for peace.

    2. rodent

      Knowing the role that the root of the word rodent plays in the greater etymology of “nigger” this can be used to justify why she saw rats and mice along with the racial slur otters in her dream earlier mentioned.

    3. amor vincit omnia

      This Latin phrase means that “love conquers all” and this suggests that though King was beaten, he sees it as more than just an act of violence, but more of a learning experience for everyone else to show that love is greater than evil.

    4. hit a lick with a crooked stick

      This was a phrase commonly associated with facing adversity and defying odds and coming out on top. This suggests that as Rodney King was facing the challenge of racial discrimination he was still able to overcome and make the best of the bad situation

    5. Rodney King’

      Rodney King was an African American construction worker who was brutally beat by four police officers during a traffic stop. This beating sparked riots all across the nation, and primarily in Los Angeles that brought attention to racial injustice in America.

    1. Rock of Ages

      Rock of ages refers to a biblical connection of smitten rock and Jesus’ smitten body. Also in the bible, a prophet by the name of Isaiah says “Trust in the Lord forever, for the Lord, the Lord himself, is the Rock eternal” which in this situation insinuates that in the midst of destruction, trust in the Lord and he will protect you.

    1. usury of affection

      Usury is a illegal action of leading money at unreasonably and unethical high rates of interest. Usury of affection could mean people buy their affection with gifts because that is what a partner wants. It could also mean fake emotions of love.

    2. Those trees would grow So far away It would be work to get it

      The speaker of the poem might be from a poor area so there is no money to be found there, nor will there ever be. There is only money far away and it’ll be almost impossible to get it.

    3. Dagwood kisses on the way to work It’s going to work

      Dagwood is a character in a cartoon made in 1933. Dagwood loved his wife Blondie and in all the comic strips every time they saw each other or did something for each other they would kiss. So when the speaker says love isn’t Dagwood kisses he is possibly saying love it isn’t rainbows, butterflies and 24/7 kisses.

    4. called each other “Dog”

      In the beginning of the poem and also back in the day boys called each other "Man" and in the present they are calling each other "Dog". This could mean that the speaker of the poem had this group of friends back in the day and now there are kids just like them but calling each other different words.

    5. bellowed anthems

      In the sense of music, bellowed means to sing a song loudly and tunelessly and possibly with anger. Anthem is a musical composition of celebration and is used as a symbol for a distinct group. Putting these two words together could mean a song sung with passion by a certain group of people, maybe African Americans that are sad of what the world is.

    6. Sullen posturings

      Sullen is a bad tempered or depressed mood. Posturings is a behavior that is intended to impress or mislead. Referring to the concept of this poem Sullen posturing could mean people are adopting a depressed attitude to mislead the news/media.

    7. He really truly deeply loved really truly deeply

      The readers of this poem could also read these lines like "He really really truly truly deeply deeply loved" which could indicate some sort of sarcasm because of the spacing.

    8. harmonized our yearnings

      Harmonized means to sing or play different musical notes that sound pleasing together. Yearning is a feeling of intense longing or desire for something. In the poem they all felt and sang about strong longing for something (the night)

    1. how do i embrace my own nakedness now that it is no longer complete?

      The poem itself is written in free verse and uses no capitalization. The repeated non-capitalization of “I”, along with the thematic elements, suggests that the narrator is experiencing disidentification with herself and her body after a mastectomy.

    2. there are no demonstrators outside the hospital to scream stop

      Along with the war imagery in this stanza, these lines seem to suggest that the narrator feels an injustice is happening to her body through breast removal.

    3. losing a war against cancer

      This line compares fighting cancer to fighting in a war. This comparison may also be referencing that Black women in the U.S. have a 31% breast cancer mortality rate, the highest mortality rate among ethnic and racial categories in the U.S.

    4. this is not south africa or nicaragua

      This line may be referencing the resistance to Apartheid in South Africa and the Nicaraguan Revolution, contributing to the imagery of violence within this stanza. These are also both locations within the African Diaspora.

    5. jim my husband

      Both names in this poem, Rebecca and Jim, appear in another one of E. Ethelbert Miller’s poems, “The Light On Rebecca’s Breast,” which is also about breast cancer and its effect on romantic relationships.

    6. Rebecca

      This poem may be titled Rebecca after E. Ethelbert Miller’s mother-in-law, Rebecca Lou King, whom he has other poems dedicated to, such as “Happiness Should Leap From A Dream.” At the 1994 Furious Flower Conference, Miller dedicates this poem to June Jordan, a poet, essayist, and activist, who was diagnosed with breast cancer and passed away from cancer complications in 2002.

    7. you ain't no a-rab

      Arab is an ethno-linguistic category, referring to peoples that speak Arabic as their native tongue. This line might be insinuating that Omar and his father are African American rather than Arab. Many Black Americans embraced Islam in the 60s and 70s as a form of Black nationalism or separatism. Famous examples of this include activist Malcolm X, boxer Muhammad Ali, and poets Amiri Baraka and Haki Madhubuti.

    8. the last time my momma took me to church was easter sunday

      This stanza switches from strong Islamic imagery to Christian imagery. In doing so, Miller might be juxtaposing a disconnect with Christianity in the speaker and a peaked interest in Islam.

    9. everything he does he does with his right hand

      In Islam, actions of honor and importance are meant to be started with the right hand, whereas actions deemed the opposite are supposed to be started with the left hand. This is because the right hand is associated with honor and nobility.

    10. it's a magic rug and maybe one day you fly away from the garbage on the sidewalk and near the curb

      This line may be referencing the magic carpet from Aladdin, a folktale found in One Thousand and One Nights (Arabian Nights). Aladdin is debatably the best known tale from One Thousand and One Nights, despite not being in the original Arabic text. The story of Aladdin was later added by Antoine Galland, a Frenchman, and this line in the poem may be referencing western perceptions of Islam and Arab identities.

    11. just some nice rugs

      Muslims use prayer rugs in order to separate the person praying from the ground and create a clean space, as wudu (cleansing and purification) must be performed before prayer. They are often decorated with patterns and shapes, which may be what the speaker means by “nice.”

    12. my momma say don't be talking about good hair and bad hair anymore because that type of thinking is backwards

      The use “good hair” and “bad hair” refers to the belief that straight hair that aligns with white beauty ideals is “good hair” and that traditionally Afro-textured hair is “bad hair.” This concept also often relates to the issue of Colorism and there has been significant pushback against the term “bad hair,” with the Black is Beautiful movement and overall embracing of natural hair.

    13. omar looks like me

      Considering that E. Ethelbert Miller typically writes from a Black perspective, this line may insinuate that Omar is also Black, or that the speaker is extending solidarity from the Black community to the Muslim community.

    14. to twist my sock around so no one notice the big hole

      The repeated imagery of the speaker’s socks having holes in them may be referencing the act of Masah in Islam, which is the ritual cleaning of the feet, followed immediately by putting on socks. Masah is forbidden if the socks have holes in them, requiring socks that can be walked in for three miles without tearing.

    15. I see all them shoes waiting by the front door of omar's house

      This line appears to reference Omar’s Muslim identity, as shoes are often taken off at the front door or before walking on carpet in Muslim households. While it is not prohibited for Muslims to wear shoes in the house, shoes are seen as unclean in Islam. Believers are required to remove their shoes before prayer and wearing shoes in mosque is forbidden.

    16. omar's

      Omar is a reoccurring childhood Muslim figure in E. Ethelbert Miller’s poetry, appearing in other works such as “Looking for Omar,” where Miller tackles anti-Muslim sentiment after 9/11. E. Ethelbert Miller stated in his reading of this poem at the 1994 Furious Flower Conference that Omar is the speaker’s “introduction to Islam.”

    1. that

      This poem seems to be talking about two different men. There is a black man who is singing the blues that we see in the first stanza, but there is also a white man who is causing the blues, that we see in the second and third stanza.

    2. blk

      "Blk" is a shortened form of "black". Shortening words this way was common during the Black Arts Movement. The Black Arts Movement was a time for breaking away from standards and ideas about what it meant to be Black. There was a focus on the Black community and African roots.

    3. zephyr

      Zephyr can mean a variety of things. It can mean a fine cotton gin, a gentle breeze, or the Greek god of the west wind. This word may suggest the duality between the wind that is mentioned later in this poem and the oppression that the cotton gin symbolizes for African Americans.

    4. sexual

      Monosexual means to be attracted to only people of a single gender. Homosexual means to be attracted to people of the same gender. Heterosexual means to be attracted to people of the opposite gender. Bisexual means to be attracted to people of both the same and opposite gender. Asexual means to be not sexually atracted to anyone.

    1. Middle Passage

      The Middle Passage was the crossing from Africa to the Americas, which the ships made carrying their 'cargo' of slaves. It was so-called because it was the middle section of the trade route taken by many of the ships

    2. Horus

      the falcon-headed Egyptian god of light and the son of Osiris and Isis whose right eye was the sun or morning star, representing power and quintessence, and whose left eye was the moon or evening star, representing healing.

    3. Pharoah,

      Pharoah Sanders (born Farrell Sanders, October 13, 1940) is an American jazz saxophonist. A member of John Coltrane's groups of the mid-1960s, Sanders is known for his overblowing, harmonic, and multi-phonic techniques on the saxophone, as well as his use of "sheets of sound"

    1. at all points

      In a version published in The Black Scholar vol. 9, no. 3, “Midnight Song” has a somewhat different ending starting after this line with a separate stanza. This alternate ending is as follows:

      "This is a blue room poem/ caught up in a web/ of no light/ The leaves weave/ a ring of gold/ painting the earth"

    2. curtain is striped

      The curtain here seems to be not only blocking out the natural light from the window, but creating the illusion of cage-like bars with stripes. This interpretation would further establish how trapped the speaker feels.

    3. a poem

      This stanza continues to show the ways in which poetry can enhance one’s imaginative perspective. It seems as though this stanza is trying to say that even an ordinary plane ride can feel magical with the creative power of poetry.

    4. blue

      Attention to color starts with the mention of blue skies and will continue throughout the rest of the poem. This seems to be Lane expressing her appreciation for the variety of colors in Africa, subverting the stereotype of Africa as the "dark continent" devoid of prosperity.