Langston Hughes (1901–1967) was a poet, novelist, playwright, columnist, and activist who also wrote operas, essays, and works for children. A “people’s poet” and a leader of the Harlem Renaissance, he was raised by his grandmother with a duty to help fellow African Americans. Indeed, his work stressed racial consciousness devoid of self-hate. Prolific from an early age, he wrote eighteen poetry collections; his most well-known poem, published when he was twenty, “The Negro Speaks of Rivers,” is included in The Weary Blues. Hughes died in New York City of complications from prostate cancer.

Photograph by Carl Van Vechten (Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division).

The Weary Blues

by Langston Hughes


Cabaret

Does a jazz-band ever sob?
They say a jazz-band’s gay.
Yet as the vulgar dancers whirled
And the wan night wore away,
One said she heard the jazz-band sob
When the little dawn was grey.

The Negro Speaks of Rivers

People on couch
To continue reading please sign in.
Join for free
Already a reader? Sign In