Richard Wright

Black Boy

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  • patrickpolus10har citeretfor 8 år siden
    said.
    I wanted to reach for the blotter and succeeded only in twitching my arm.
    “Here,” she said sharply, reaching for the blotter and shoving it into my fingers.
    She wrote in ink on an envelope and pushed it toward me. Holding the blotter in my hand, I stared at the envelope and could not move.
    “Blot it,” she said.
    I could not lift my hand. I knew what she had said; I knew what she wanted me to do; and I had heard her correctly. I wanted to look at her
  • refatbarihar citeretfor 8 år siden
    ard and the instant his hand left me I jumped to my feet and broke into a wild run, trying to elude the people who surrounded me, heading for the street. I was caught before I had gone ten paces.
    From that moment on things became tangled for me.
  • A.A. ABDULKAREEMhar citeretfor 5 år siden
    Wright was nearly six years dead when Miss Crawford—a thin, short woman with eyeglasses and a warm nature—gave us the books, but his death and his life and his work meant nothing to me that afternoon.
  • Leticia Char citeretfor 6 år siden
    Why had I not thought of those things before I fired the curtains?
  • Jahseem Clarkhar citeretfor 6 år siden
    I had sought to avoid, from fear that had been too painful to bear, I had learned to like my unintermittent burden of feeling, had become habituated to acting with all of my being, had learned to seek those areas of life, those situations, where I knew that events would complement my own inner mood. I was conscious of what was happening to me; I knew that my attitude of watchful wonder had usurped all other feelings, had become the meaning of my life, an integral part of my personality; that I was striving to live and measure all things by it. Having no claims upon others, I bent the way the wind blew, rendering unto my environment that which was my environment’s, and rendering unto myself that which I felt was mine.

    It was a dangerous way to live, far more dangerous than violating laws or ethical codes of conduct; but the danger was for me and me alone. Had I not been conscious of what I was doing, I could have easily lost my way in the fogbound regions of compelling fantasy. Even so, I floundered, staggered; but somehow I always groped my way back to that path where I felt a tinge of warmth from an unseen light.
  • Jahseem Clarkhar citeretfor 6 år siden
    My purpose was to capture a physical state or movement that carried a strong subjective impression, an accomplishment which seemed supremely worth struggling for. If I could fasten the mind of the reader upon words so firmly that he would forget words and be conscious only of his response, I felt that I would be in sight of knowing how to write narrative. I strove to master words, to make them disappear, to make them important by making them new, to make them melt into a rising spiral of emotional stimuli, each greater than the other, each feeding and reinforcing the other, and all ending in an emotional climax that would drench the reader with a sense of a new world. That was the single aim of my living.
  • Jahseem Clarkhar citeretfor 6 år siden
    nothingness that my mind began to dwell, that constant sense of wanting without having, of being hated without reason. A dim notion of what life meant to a Negro in America was coming to consciousness in me, not in terms of external events, lynchings, Jim Crowism, and the endless brutalities, but in terms of crossed-up feeling, of psyche pain. I sensed that Negro life was a sprawling land of unconscious suffering, and there were but few Negroes who knew the meaning of their lives, who could tell their story.)
  • Juan Solanohar citeretfor 6 år siden
    My brother and I used to play hide and seek in the long, narrow hallways, and on and under the stairs.
  • austinlindsey0818har citeretfor 6 år siden
    Many mornings I was too weak from hunger to pull the grass; I would grow dizzy and my mind would become blank and I would find myself, after an interval of unconsciousness, upon my hands and knees, my head whirling, my eyes staring in bleak astonishment at the green grass, wondering where I was, feeling that I was emerging from a dream…
  • austinlindsey0818har citeretfor 6 år siden
    would lead a herd of us to the vast lawn and we would get to our knees and wrench the grass loose from the dirt with our fingers.
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