Gwendolyn Brooks, "To the Diaspora"

Text on p. 1236 of the full Ninth Edition.





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When you set out for Afrika
you did not know you were going.
Because
you did not know you were Afrika.
You did not know the Black continent
that had to be reached
was you.

I could not have told you then that some sun
would come,
somewhere over the road,
would come evoking the diamonds
of you, the Black continent—
somewhere over the road.
You would not have believed my mouth.

When I told you, meeting you somewhere close
to the heat and youth of the road,
liking my loyalty, liking belief,
you smiled and you thanked me but very little believed me.

Here is some sun. Some.
Now off into the places rough to reach.
Though dry, though drowsy, all unwillingly a-wobble,
into the dissonant and dangerous crescendo.
Your work, that was done, to be done to be done to be done.

Reading Questions

1. Read the poem out loud, observing the line breaks carefully. What is the speaker's tone of voice? What does the speaker offer "you," the person who "set out for Afrika"? How is the "you" also "the diaspora"? How do you picture the speaker? What does the speaker know that the audience does not?

2. What kind of journey is the poem talking about? How can a person be a continent?

3. Do you think that Brooks has a particular kind of reader in mind? In what ways might she be addressing you and your concerns?

 



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