African American Poetry: A Digital AnthologyMain MenuFull Text Collection: Books Published by African American Poets, 1870-1928Long list of 100+ full texts books of poetry available on this "Anthology"Author Pages: Bios and Full Text CollectionsList of African American poets onAfrican American Periodical Poetry (1900-1928)A collection of African Amerian Periodical Poetry, mostly focused on 1900-1928Areas of Interest: Topics and ThemesAfrican American Poetry: Anthologies of the 1920sPoetry by African American Women (1890-1930): A Reader and GuideOpen access textbook introducing readers to Poetry by Black WomenExploring Datasets related to African American poetryAbout This Site: Mission Statement, Contributors, and Recent UpdatesAn account of the history and evolution of this site by the site editor.Further Reading / Works CitedAmardeep Singhc185e79df2fca428277052b90841c4aba30044e1
The Weary Blues Front Piece (1926)
1media/The-Weary-Blues-front-piece-1926_thumb.png2022-01-12T10:03:24-05:00Amardeep Singhc185e79df2fca428277052b90841c4aba30044e12131The Weary Blues Front Piece (1926)plain2022-01-12T10:03:24-05:00Amardeep Singhc185e79df2fca428277052b90841c4aba30044e1
Critics such as Arnold Rampersad have particularly singled out Hughes' innovative embrace of concepts borrowed from jazz and blues music as the defining innovation of this collection. The blues in particular would be central to Hughes' second published book of poems, Fine Clothes to the Jew (1928). Here, Hughes' interest in the collection seems equally divided between the blues theme and concepts and experiences closer to Jazz (along those lines, see "Jazzonia,""Negro Dancers,""To Midnight Nan at Leroys" and "The Cat and the Saxophone," to name just a few)
Langston Hughes first began publishing his poetry in The Crisis in June 1921; his first poem published there, fittingly, was "The Negro Speaks of Rivers," one of his most famous and enduring works. However, Hughes also published many other poems that would appear in The Weary Blues in magazines like Opportunity and Survey Graphic in the years leading up to the publication of his first book.
For more on Langston Hughes, see our detailed timeline and Author Bio here. It features a timeline marking Hughes' various publications through the mid-1920s.
This text was produced using the scanned version of the first edition of the book available at Google Books. For this digital edition, I extracted a plain text version, and then formatted and tagged the poems in the Table of Contents below. The plain text version can be found here.
--Amardeep Singh, Lehigh University. January 2022 --------------------
The Weary Blues by Langston Hughes
With an Introduction by Carl Van Vechten
New York: Alfred A. Knopf 1926
--------------------- Dedication: "To my mother" --------------------- "I wish to thank the editors of The Crisis, Opportunity, Survey Graphic, Vanity Fair, The World Tomorrow and The Amsterdam News for having published some of the poems in this book."