Categories
1940s African American Outdoors Poem Stars, Moon, Sky

I Like to Hear the Wind

I Like to Hear the Wind

By Effie Lee Newsome
Annotations by Karen Kilcup
Original 1940 woodcut for “I Like the Wind,”
by Lois Mailou Jones. Public Domain.
I like to hear the wind at night
Running along with all its might,
Over the roof and over my head,
Way up above my cozy bed.

I like to hear the wind by day,
Calling out in such a jolly way,
Making my hat go sailing out,
Slapping my coat and hair about.
Newsome, Effie Lee. “I Like to Hear the Wind.” Gladiola Garden: Poems of Outdoors and Indoors for Second Grade Readers. Washington, DC: Associated Publishers, 1940, 160.

Contexts

Newsome worked among the many celebrated writers of the Harlem Renaissance, who included Langston Hughes, Countee Cullen, James Weldon Johnson, Zora Neale Hurston, and Anne Spencer, many of them poets. Among her noteworthy contributions to that movement was her writing and editing for W. E. B. Du Bois’s magazine, The Crisis, the official publication of the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People). As John Claborn points out, Du Bois’s political goals embraced the idea of access to natural spaces, and the magazine featured environmental writing by such notable authors as Arna Bontemps, Claude McKay, and Hughes. Newsome contributed to and edited “The Little Page” (“Whimsies for the Younger Folk”), where much of her work emphasized nature. This poem, like many others in The Envious Lobster, focuses on nature’s power to spark children’s imagination.

Resources for Further Study
Contemporary Connections

Anonymous. Reading of Newsome’s poem, “The Bronze Legacy.” The illustrations for Gladiola Garden were done by prominent Black artist Loïs Mailou Jones (1905-1998).

Johnston, Amber O’Neal. “African American Poetry: Effie Lee Newsome. Heritage Mom blog.

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