Northwestern University Press, 1996 Paper: 978-0-8101-5045-4 Library of Congress Classification PS3503.R833A17 1996 Dewey Decimal Classification 811.52
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Arguably the greatest African American poet of the century, Sterling Brown was instrumental in bringing the traditions of African American folk life to readers all over the world. This is the definitive collection of Brown's poems, and the only edition available in the United States.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Sterling A. Brown was one of the most important and influential figures in the development of African-American literature and criticism in the twentieth century. Born in Washington, D.C., in 1901, he became not only a poet but a folklorist, anthologist, critic, and reviewer. Brown was a professor at Howard University for forty years. He died in 1989.
REVIEWS
"Sterling Brown's poetry should be in print in perpetuity. Its meanings, legends, melodies, and mythologies could only have been shaped by a Black American throat. Sterling Brown's poems have the power of revival music, the declaration of great oratory, and the sonorous crooning of a young man in love." --Maya Angelou
— -
"This is a great book of poems, stunning in its artistry and gigantic in its vision." --Philip Levine
— -
"In Sterling's poetry you find the true meaning of the world soul." --Ernest J. Gaines, author of A Lesson before Dying
"For the first time, we can appreciate Mr. Brown's full range, his mastery of so many traditions. . . . A self-styled 'Old Negro,' Sterling Brown is not only the Afro-American Poet Laureate, he is a great poet." --Henry Louis Gates, Jr., New York Times Book Review
— -
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Preface by Michael S. Harper
Southern Road
Introduction by Sterling Stuckey
Introduction to the first edition by James Weldon Johnson
Part One: ROAD SO ROCKY
Odyssey of Big Boy
Long Gone
Maumee Ruth
When de Saints Go Ma'ching Home
Dark of the Moon
Seeking Religion
Georgie Grimes
Scotty Has His Say
Ruminations of Luke Johnson
Virginia Portrait
Old Man Buzzard
Johnny Thomas
Frankie and Johnny
Sam Smiley
To Sallie, Walking
Bessie
Kentucky Blues
Mister Samuel and Sam
Southern Road
Sister Lou
Strong Men
Part Two: ON RESTLESS RIVER
Memphis Blues
Ma Rainey
Old King Cotton
Children of the Mississippi
New St. Louis Blues
Foreclosure
Checkers
Mose
After Winter
Pardners
Slim Greer
Slim Lands a Job?
Slin in Atlanta
Slim Hears "The Call"
Slim in Hell
New Steps
Convict
Strange Legacies
Revelations
Riverbank Blues
Part Three: TIN ROOF BLUES
Tin Roof Blues
Effie
Children's Children
Mecca
Chillen Get Shoes
Funeral
Harlem Street Walkers
Sporting Beasley
Cabaret
Part Four: VESTIGES
Salutamus
To a Certain Lady, in Her Garden
Challenge
Telling Fortunes
Rain
Return
Nous n'irons plus au bois . . .
Thoughts of Death
Against That Day
Mill Mountain
The Last Ride of Wild Bill
The Last Ride of Wild Bill
He Was a Man
Elder Mistletoe
Crispus Attucks McKoy
A Bad, Bad Man
Break of Day
Rent Day Blues
The Ballad of Joe Meek
No Hiding Place
Part One: HARLEM STOPOVER
Harlem Happiness
Negro Improvement League
The Temple
Roberta Lee
Real mammy Song
The Law for George
The New Congo
Part Two: THE COTTON SOUTH
Arkansas Chant
The Young Ones
Old Lem
Sharecroppers
Master and Man
Part Three: DOWN IN ATLANTA
Southern Cop
Mr. Danny
An Old Woman Remembers
Transfer
Episode
All Are Gay
Part Four: "ROCKS CRIED OUT"
Legend
Bitter Fruit of the Tree
Memo: For the Race Orators
Crossing
Call for Barnum
Song of Triumph
Remembering Nat Turner
Part Five: ROAD TO THE LEFT
Raise a Song
Colloquy
Street Car Gang
Side by Side
Part Six: FRILOT COVE
Let Us Suppose
Cloteel
Parish Doctor
Uncle Joe
Louisiana Pastoral
Part Seven: WASHINGTON, D.C.
Glory, Glory
Choices
No More Worlds to Conquer
Call Boy
Puttin' on Dog
Part Eight: REMEMBRANCES
April in Coolwell
Coolwell Vignette
Honey Mah Love
Memories of Salem
Idyll
One Way of Taking Leave
Isaiah to Mandy
Conjured
Long Track Blues
An Annotated Bibliography by Robert G. O'Meally
REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
If you are a student who cannot use this book in printed form, BiblioVault may be able to supply you
with an electronic file for alternative access.
Please have the accessibility coordinator at your school fill out this form.
Northwestern University Press, 1996 Paper: 978-0-8101-5045-4
Arguably the greatest African American poet of the century, Sterling Brown was instrumental in bringing the traditions of African American folk life to readers all over the world. This is the definitive collection of Brown's poems, and the only edition available in the United States.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Sterling A. Brown was one of the most important and influential figures in the development of African-American literature and criticism in the twentieth century. Born in Washington, D.C., in 1901, he became not only a poet but a folklorist, anthologist, critic, and reviewer. Brown was a professor at Howard University for forty years. He died in 1989.
REVIEWS
"Sterling Brown's poetry should be in print in perpetuity. Its meanings, legends, melodies, and mythologies could only have been shaped by a Black American throat. Sterling Brown's poems have the power of revival music, the declaration of great oratory, and the sonorous crooning of a young man in love." --Maya Angelou
— -
"This is a great book of poems, stunning in its artistry and gigantic in its vision." --Philip Levine
— -
"In Sterling's poetry you find the true meaning of the world soul." --Ernest J. Gaines, author of A Lesson before Dying
"For the first time, we can appreciate Mr. Brown's full range, his mastery of so many traditions. . . . A self-styled 'Old Negro,' Sterling Brown is not only the Afro-American Poet Laureate, he is a great poet." --Henry Louis Gates, Jr., New York Times Book Review
— -
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Preface by Michael S. Harper
Southern Road
Introduction by Sterling Stuckey
Introduction to the first edition by James Weldon Johnson
Part One: ROAD SO ROCKY
Odyssey of Big Boy
Long Gone
Maumee Ruth
When de Saints Go Ma'ching Home
Dark of the Moon
Seeking Religion
Georgie Grimes
Scotty Has His Say
Ruminations of Luke Johnson
Virginia Portrait
Old Man Buzzard
Johnny Thomas
Frankie and Johnny
Sam Smiley
To Sallie, Walking
Bessie
Kentucky Blues
Mister Samuel and Sam
Southern Road
Sister Lou
Strong Men
Part Two: ON RESTLESS RIVER
Memphis Blues
Ma Rainey
Old King Cotton
Children of the Mississippi
New St. Louis Blues
Foreclosure
Checkers
Mose
After Winter
Pardners
Slim Greer
Slim Lands a Job?
Slin in Atlanta
Slim Hears "The Call"
Slim in Hell
New Steps
Convict
Strange Legacies
Revelations
Riverbank Blues
Part Three: TIN ROOF BLUES
Tin Roof Blues
Effie
Children's Children
Mecca
Chillen Get Shoes
Funeral
Harlem Street Walkers
Sporting Beasley
Cabaret
Part Four: VESTIGES
Salutamus
To a Certain Lady, in Her Garden
Challenge
Telling Fortunes
Rain
Return
Nous n'irons plus au bois . . .
Thoughts of Death
Against That Day
Mill Mountain
The Last Ride of Wild Bill
The Last Ride of Wild Bill
He Was a Man
Elder Mistletoe
Crispus Attucks McKoy
A Bad, Bad Man
Break of Day
Rent Day Blues
The Ballad of Joe Meek
No Hiding Place
Part One: HARLEM STOPOVER
Harlem Happiness
Negro Improvement League
The Temple
Roberta Lee
Real mammy Song
The Law for George
The New Congo
Part Two: THE COTTON SOUTH
Arkansas Chant
The Young Ones
Old Lem
Sharecroppers
Master and Man
Part Three: DOWN IN ATLANTA
Southern Cop
Mr. Danny
An Old Woman Remembers
Transfer
Episode
All Are Gay
Part Four: "ROCKS CRIED OUT"
Legend
Bitter Fruit of the Tree
Memo: For the Race Orators
Crossing
Call for Barnum
Song of Triumph
Remembering Nat Turner
Part Five: ROAD TO THE LEFT
Raise a Song
Colloquy
Street Car Gang
Side by Side
Part Six: FRILOT COVE
Let Us Suppose
Cloteel
Parish Doctor
Uncle Joe
Louisiana Pastoral
Part Seven: WASHINGTON, D.C.
Glory, Glory
Choices
No More Worlds to Conquer
Call Boy
Puttin' on Dog
Part Eight: REMEMBRANCES
April in Coolwell
Coolwell Vignette
Honey Mah Love
Memories of Salem
Idyll
One Way of Taking Leave
Isaiah to Mandy
Conjured
Long Track Blues
An Annotated Bibliography by Robert G. O'Meally
REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
If you are a student who cannot use this book in printed form, BiblioVault may be able to supply you
with an electronic file for alternative access.
Please have the accessibility coordinator at your school fill out this form.
It can take 2-3 weeks for requests to be filled.
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE