The Longfellow poem shows what discerns a hard working individual who will rise above the others from the people who will do the bare minimum. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow wrote this poem as a quote a long time ago, but in the for of a poem. The Longfellow poem states,
“The heights by great men reached and kept, Were not attained by sudden flight; But they, while their companions slept, Were toiling upward through the night.”
You can easily tell that the author of this poem admires the people who work harder than the rest, people who strive to be better than others, people like Marie Curie and Daniel Hale Williams.
Marie Curie was a polish physicist in Paris, France. She and her husband, Pierre Curie, lived in rough conditions. Sometimes
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There, anyone of any color could get quality health care. Daniel, as a doctor, went looking for work. Nobody seemed to want a black doctor, so he descided to create his own hospital. A hospital that black people could work at, and one that would provide care to blacks as well as white people. Hardly any other hospitals would provide care for black people. Most hospitals would just turn them away with out a care. In 1893, a man by the name of James Cornish had been stabbed in the chest with a knife. Daniel Hale Williams, the founder of Provident Hospital, was the first African American who performed a successful heart surgery. Mr. Williams saved James Cornish’s life, and was able to help many others too.
We can learn a lot about these scientists of the past. One important lesson is to never stop seeking out knowledge, and keep learning about whatever you are passionate about. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow shows this in his poem when he mentions,
“But they, while their companions slept, Were toiling upward through the night.”
If there is something you want to know, or do, work towards it and never let it out of your sight. Be one of the great men Longfellow mentions in his
Back in the day doctors believed that non-doctors could never understand since they didn’t go to college or medical school. In result doctors never explained to patient’s their procedures, and they weren’t forced to by any law. Hopkins was one of the few hospitals that treated black patients. The Lack’s and poor uneducated black families went to Hopkins and put all their faith in the doctors. They had no idea that they were being experimented on.
John Hopkins was one of the best hospitals, but they didn’t go there by preference, this was one of the best hospitals that accepted black people. In the era of Jim Crow, when black people showed up at white-only hospitals, the staff sent them away, even if it meant they might die in the parking
He wanted his privileges to be the same as any white doctor so he ended up co-founding the Provident Hospital. “During Williams’s tenure as physician-owner (1891-1912), Provident hospital grew, largely due to its extremely high success rate in patient recovery: 87 percent” (Ruffin). In 1983 Dr. Williams performed the first open heart surgery on a black young man and was successful. This is impressive because the time period where he done the surgery, he did not have many tools or preparations as open heart surgery now. Williams had to use many tactics and study the patient more in-depth than doctors do now.
Charles Richard Drew was born on June 3,1904, in Washington, D.C. Charles Richard Drew was an African American surgeon who developed a way to store blood plasma for transfusion and coordinated the first substantial blood in the United States. He conducted the blood plasma programs of the United States and Great Britain during World War 2. Charles resigned, knowing that the blood of the African Americans would be separated. He died on April 1,1950.
During the 50s most hospitals did not treat patients that were African American. The ones that did, had certain wards called "Color wards" we're African Americans would go to be treated. Hospital Discrimination in Detroit states, even in certain hospitals, people's rooms were separated by race and gender (Hospital Discrimination in Detroit, n.d). This time period has been know for the discrimination and segregation of African American citizens. Furthermore in this time period African Americans could not go to the same school, use the same bathrooms, and drink out of the same drinking fountains as white people.
One lesson is to not let others control your life. Another lesson is letting people help one’s self. The final lesson is to limit the amount of alcohol one consumes. Firstly, a lesson learned from reading the novel, is that one should not let other people control one’s life.
Daniel Hale Williams was an astonishing man and accomplished many things during his lifetime. Williams opened the first interracial hospital. Williams set up his own particular practice in Chicago's South Side and taught anatomy at his institute of matriculation, likewise turning into the first African-American doctor to work for the city's road railroad framework. Because of the segregation of the day, African-American citizens were still banished from being admitted to doctor's facilities and black specialists were declined staff positions. In May 1891, Williams opened Provident Hospital and Training School for Nurses, the country's first doctor's facility with a nursing and assistant program that had a racially coordinated staff.
Next, the life lesson is learned when the narrator comes to the realization that even though his father rarely spoke; he was always there to support him. As told by the narrator “Maybe words aren’t what’s important. Maybe words would just steal away your freedom to think for yourself” (de la Pena 10). The narrator learns the life lesson of the importance to think for oneself. The final life lesson is shortly after when the narrator is writing his essay on what he learned over the summer.
Hardworking represents the American voice by being proud in what you do regardless what time or how tired they look on the bright side of things. In the 2nd poem “I,Too,Sing america” by Langston Hughes 's poem is too capture and celebrate the culture or Black America. In the poem he states “ I am the darker brother” in line 2 and in line 15 & 16 he states “They’ll see how beautiful I am and be ashamed I,Too,Sing
To sum up, Vivien Thomas is one the most important cardiac surgeons in history, and we shouldn’t let his skin color get in the way of his amazing
Working closely with the Freedmen’s Bureau and other African American physicians,
In conclusion, the short story "There Will Come Soft Rains" by Ray Bradbury includes many possible life lessons that the reader can learn about such as the world keeps spinning even if one were to fade, everything goes through a cycle and there is always a new
Daniel Hale Williams was the first successful American to perform open heart surgery. He was a very determined and well driven doctor who had many achievements during his career as being a doctor. After reading Medicine with Dr. Henry Palmer, who had been the Surgeon General of the Wisconsin Regiments during the Civil War, Hale became the first African-American to graduate from Northwestern University Medical school (John Boman. “ Daniel Hale Williams (1858-1931) Jan 2001. N.P. Ebscohost.
The first thing I learned was how keeping a secret from everyone destroys a person. “This feeble and most sensitive of spirits could do neither, yet continually did one thing or another, which intertwined, in the same inextricable knot, the agony of heaven-defying guilt and vain repentance” (Page 144). This quote is showing how Dimmesdale’s guilt and secret is destroying him, and turning him into a madman of sorts. I think this lesson still hold true in our society today. A majority of people have a very strong conscious, and when they are guilty of something, or they have a major secret and they don’t tell anyone, it will tend to destroy the person.
My second life lesson is to just simply be nice. You never know what someone is going through and the struggles that they may have. Be polite and smile at people. Even though someone might be mean to you, kill them with kindness. My third lesson is not take your family for granite.