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Essay on We Wear the Mask |
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This is the first 1,000 characters of 576 words (2.3 pages) in the essay titled We Wear the Mask
In one of Paul Lawrence Dunbar’s most famous poem’s “We Wear the Mask,” he describes the harsh reality of the black race in America and how they hide their grief, sadness, and broken hearts under a mask for a survival strategy towards whites.
“We wear the mask that grins and lies,
It hides our cheeks and shades our eyes,
With torn and bleeding hearts we smile,
In the first verse, the mask is taken off. The “We” of the poem describes the black community that lives a double life, the masked and the unmasked. Dunbar included the word “mask” in his poem because historically it was a false deceptive role-playing that was acceptable for a survival strategy by blacks and it maintained a sense of empowerment in a racial society. The word “lies” is a simple word but the mask not only lies to the whites, but to the person who is wearing the mask that start to live by it. Dunbar uses the word “mouth” as a verb, which intensifies our expressive genuine facial features that never lies. In life, the mask is the concealment of those features that reveal tears that give quality to a smile. The masks when worn is always smiling but underneath are the torn and broken heart of one’s soul and “this debt we pay to human guile.” The debt that the black community is paying dearly by wearing the mask everyday for the cunning white race with “myriad subtleties”, the black race that wants to speak out and be heard.
In counting all our tears and sighs?
The second verse, the mask is replaced...
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Keywords: we wear the mask, survival strategy, dunbar, subtleties, bleeding hearts, smile, second verse, poem, famous poems, facial features, harsh reality, first verse
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