Happy Day
Oh Happy Day
When there isn’t any more hunger
When there isn’t any more children being killed in the streets
Oh Happy Day
When a mother doesn’t have to bury her child
That was going to school, the corner store, movies, or sleeping in their beds
Oh Happy Day
When our little girls can walk down the street and not be kidnapped, turned out, and sold for a can of beans
Oh Happy Day
When our little boys can just be boys and not fear that their friend is coming to school to kill them, stab their rival teammate because they played better ball, or have to worry about being taken too
Oh Happy Day
When there is a cure for AIDS, Cancer, and other thieves of our life
Oh Happy Day
What a day it will be
Look Up
Remember as a kid
Your mother
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Maya Angelou
You were an inspiration to many
To me you were a fellow poet who accomplished so much and I am honored
Your work of poetry is a canvass for the world to see what words can paint
Maya Angelou
You are my muse
He
He is all the man I need
He protects me from harm
He loves
Graduation: Rhetorical Analysis Maya Angelou was a very well-known writer as well as a Civil rights activist. Angelou was born in St. Louis, Missouri on April 4th, 1928. She always showed a love for writing, most well-known for her work I know why the caged bird sings, she also wrote many essays that put her on the map in the literature community. Throughout her career as a writer, she received many awards including a nomination for a Pulitzer Prize alongside two NAACP Image Awards. She even was asked to recite one of her poems at Bill Clinton’s inauguration in 1993.
Maya Angelou has been an influential woman throughout her life; she left her mark in history and literature, and she celebrated the experience of being black in the US. The most breathtaking of all her achievements is the construction of her own personality. As she stated once, “my mission in life is not merely to survive, but to thrive; and to do so with some passion, some compassion, some humor, and some style”. Remembering her, it is important to highlight her commitment with equality; it was a fight not only for her own life, for women and for Afro-American people, but also for peace and justice all over the world.
On July 28th, there is multiple celebrations, Chocolate Milk Day, Talk to Someone in an Elevator Day, Appreciation Day, Worlds Hepatitis Day, Parents Day; I think I will pass on telling my parents that one. Any celebration is special to the people who celebrate it. One celebration that occurred was when, Keri Lynn Atkinson went into labor on July 27th, 1998; shock it was, when the due date was set for two days later. The morning of the 27th, she had a feeling that, her baby girl was on its way. Telling my dad to go to work, and would call when the water broke.
Maya’s Ties with God Have you ever heard of Tupac cry, Maya Angelou was one, if not the only one who made him. Maya Angelou is one of the biggest voices of the 21st century. She does not talk, but she speaks, and she mostly speaks in the language of love. The reason? God.
Born on April 4, 1928 and died on May 28, 2014(bio.com). Maya Angelou was known for her famous memoir in 1969, I know why the Caged Bird Sings(bio.com). I chose her because she inspires me to do more than what I am doing. While she was alive, she was an author, actress, screenwriter, dancer, and poet. This essay will talk about her life and her accomplishments and what she went threw.
Maya Angelou has a high regard for her family in the poem “Avec Merci, Mother”. Every one born in this universe, love and esteem their mother. Maya Angelou is no exception. She admires her mother, appreciates her role in the family and expresses her gratitude by singing songs to praise her greatness. She is adorned as a courteous and gracious lady from whom she has learnt all manners.
Maya Angelou was one of the greatest American writers of the 20th century. She discussed topics that most people never would have, with open arms. She truly was a woman of many talents and her work will last throughout the ages. Maya Angelou. A true renaissance woman who will be remembered… if we make her works part of the American school curriculum.
When thinking of a historical figure, many imagine a president, king, or general that lead a country to greatness, but never realized some could be the ones who influence the minds of society. Although not thought of as anything, writers and poets hold the key to shaping the society’s mindset without even knowing it. Being a civil rights activist, social activist, and role model for women makes Maya Angelou a historical figure who has made a huge impact in American society and in American history. Born poor and black, she was a childhood victim of rape, shamed into silence. She was a young single mother who had to work at strip clubs for a living.
Maya Angelou philosophy and teachings are timeless. There is a lesson to be learned in her more than 30 published works and her lessons taught as a professor and lecturer. More important she lived what she preached. She had a strong belief in humanity as a whole, in the human spirit and in the African American community. She fought tirelessly to change extinguish racism, prejudice and discrimination during a time when she herself as a black woman experienced its effects.
Maya Angelou was a strong African-American women who made an influential impact on the Civil Rights Movement, in bother her actions, and her literature. Her life experiences and courage helped others, and made her work influential. During Maya’s early life, she experienced many hardships that shaped her into the person many remember her as. Born on April 4, 1928, she only lived in St. Louis, MO for three years before her parents got divorced, and Maya, along with her mother and brother, moved in with her grandparents in Arkansas. At the age of eight, raped by her mother’s boyfriend, Maya learned the power that words possess.
"My mission in life is not merely to survive, but to thrive, and to do so with some passion, some compassion, some humor, and some style" (Angelou 12). These quoted words came from a strong, wise minded, African American woman whose legacy still lives on. In this essay you will understand a lot about Maya Angelou's early life on how she became famous, her careers, how many awards she has received, and also how her legacy continues to have an impact on people. Maya was born in St. Louis, Missouri, on April 4, 1928 (Angelou 8). During Maya's growth she spent most of her days at the library attending Toussaint L'ouverture Grammar school (Angelou 8).
Langston Hughes and Maya Angelou were African Americans alive during the period in American history when minority groups were fighting hard for their rights and respect among the country. These two authors used their writing skill to shed light on how African Americans felt throughout this period of time, opening many people’s eyes to how the oppressed truly felt. The civil rights movement could have had an entirely different outcome if it weren’t outspoken individuals such as these two. In Hughes’s well known poem “I, Too,” Hughes talks about how the people that mistreat him will soon regret everything they’ve done and will realize the true potential of him and everyone like him.
In American history, there have been poets that have arrived on the scenes, taken the world by storm, and disappeared abruptly. Two of these poets are Maya Angelou and Langston Hughes. These poets have shared their works of art with the world, and they have not gone unnoticed. As far as these two went in life, it is very surprising to find out that the two of them come from be humble beginnings. Marguerite Annie Johnson Angelou.
“Phenomenal Woman” Phenomenal Woman, by Maya Angelou is an inspiring poem that encourages women, including myself to be confident and to love themselves just the way they are. It encourages women to be independent and confident despite what others think about them, especially men. In “Phenomenal Woman”, there are various literary devices used, some of which include repetition, parallelism, metaphors and personification. The obvious repetition in the poem is at the end of every stanza, through the phrases” I am a woman, phenomenally, phenomenal woman, that’s me”.
Maya (Marguerite) Angelou, Mrs. Bertha Flowers, Vivian Baxter and Anne Henderson. These women shaped Maya and molded her into the woman that she would later become. Their role in society, speech, knowledge, and strength enable Maya to become a strong outspoken, valuable member of