Sunday, April 12, 2020
Black Boy Essays (682 words) - Black Boy, Pressure,
  Black Boy    A word is just characters (letters) put together to make a meaning, statement,  or idea. In the South, whites wanted power over the blacks, and the only form it  came in was a word. By the first amendment the whites had power to use words, as  did the journalist against the southern whites. Richard grows up learning about  the south and how it demolishes others, and how it stabs him in the back by  words. Richard at the age of four learns that words have an undeniable power  behind and in front of them. Parents are our first source of knowledge, power,  and style of living. They structure us (children) for today's world. Richard  began his life without his mother and father's right hand. The mother never  tried to be nice, or caring to him, and the father had to work at night. At home  his is not expected to be a child, but a nothing. He is no supposed to run yell,  even have fun. "He was the lawgiver in our family, and I never laughed in his  presence." (16) Richard was playing with a cat, but his dad rest during the  day. The cat would meow and purr, but the father told him to kill the damn cat.    Richard did so, without having any feeling toward the cat. Richard really knew  that the dad did not mean it, but he did it. The father leaves, this being one  of the major reasons. The consequence of this action is the Richard, the mother,  and brother, now have to work more to make money, and have to starve at some  moments. Whites expect gratitude and polite measures from the blacks at all  times. The whites are the supremacy of the land and should not and could not be  fooled. Richard was working for a clothing store, where blacks where undersold.    He would make deliveries for the store and one day he got a flat tire on the  bike. There were white drunk southerners who were willing to give Richard a  ride. Richard did accept the ride. During the ride empty bottle did hit him, but  never a white man. " ?Oh no.' I said. The words where barely out of my  mouth .... ?Ain't you learned to say sir to a white man yet!'" (200) The  whites always want to be referred to Sir or Mam. The whites hit Richard because  they have the power to do so for this. The word "sir" if said has the power  to put down a black (for condolence to higher power), and if not said, it had  the power to kill (for no condolence to higher power). The whites have an  unbalanced situation for the blacks. Blacks have a life of pressure, no choice  to do or not to do. Richard works for an optical company, and across the street  another boy named Harrison in the same field of job. They do not know each  other, but the whites in the town do. In chapter Twelve, the whites use words of  pressure, to persuade Richard and Harrison to fight themselves. Both have a  feeling toward another that one is going to crumble before the whites. Harrison  is the one; he crumbles for five dollars. He is selling himself out to the  whites. They do make a verbal agreement not to be harsh. That is not what  happens, and they fight for blood (like a chicken fight). The idea here is that  the words, if used in the right way, leads to life; if used with pressure and a  verbal agreement, it leads to pain. A small tiny boy of four years old, had the  left hand to learn that words have an undeniable power behind them. Richard  learns that words: if taken literally can separate people (father); that simple  words have a unbalanced situation for blacks (car ride with whites); the words  of used correctly, leads to life, and is used for pressure and verbal  agreements, leads to pain. On the way north on the train, Richard realizes that  he knows the south, and he is just beginning to learn it. He figures out you  have to see the whole picture, then the inside first. He also knows he is not  leaving it all behind. The emotions, thoughts, and words (scars) are still going  wherever he does.    
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