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Essay Comparing Sonny's Blues And The Weary Blues

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The High of Music In several cultures, music is said to be a universal language. Music can portray emotion that anyone can understand and relate to, transcending any singular tongue. In "Sonny's Blues" by James Baldwin, and "The Weary Blues" by Langston Hughes, music is portrayed as being a connection to the happenings of character's lives, a way of channeling and expressing their emotions as something physical. Both of the characters are going through difficult times during their separate works. In “Sonny's Blues,” the brother of the main character, Sonny, tells his story, from the time they were living together to when they went their separate ways. Sonny is a heroine addict who has recently been released from a detainment center of some sort, some place where he was forced into a sudden and painful withdrawal. In “The Weary Blues,” the narrator depicts a negro man playing the piano and singing about how his life has gone wrong. The negro man’s lyrics say, …show more content…

Sonny’s first time back to playing after he cleaned up from his addiction showed a whirlwind of different emotions; anxiety, self-doubt, excitement, and fear. The stuttering emotions of this part of the work can be reflected through the stuttering dialogue. Baldwin uses lots of long sentences that are very choppy and disjointed, such as, “He and the piano stammered, started one way, got scared, stopped; started another way, panicked, marked time, started again; then seemed to have found a direction, panicked again, got stuck.” The negro man in “The Weary Blues” wasn’t showing the same emotion, but he was in a different setting as well. Hughes uses expressive phrases like “He made that poor piano moan with melody,” and “In a deep voice with a melancholy tone,” to show the emotion in this piece. This creates a connection with the deep, soulful music that is spilling out of the

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