Summary
Frustrated by his mother's order to remain quiet, four-year-old Richard
Wright is bored out of his mind in his grandparents' house in Natchez,
Mississippi. With nothing better to do, Richard plays with a broom,
lighting stray straws in the fireplace and watching them burn. He
then decides to set the curtains on fire to see what they look like
when they burn. The fire rages out of control, and the terrified
Richard runs out of the room. Fearing punishment, he hides under
the burning house until his father, Nathan, retrieves him. Richard's
mother, Ella, then lashes him until he loses consciousness, knocking
him into a delusional fever for several days. Wright then muses,
in a stretch of intensely descriptive writing, on his fantastical and
sentimental reflections upon the world around him.
Richard recovers from his fever and moves with his family to Memphis,
Tennessee. His father, Nathan, works as a night porter in a drugstore and
sleeps during the day. One morning, Richard and his brother, playing
with a noisy stray kitten they have found outside, wake Nathan.
The kitten will not go away. In frustration, Nathan shouts, Kill
that damn thing! Though Richard knows that his father does not
really want them to kill the cat, he resents his father's shouting and
domineering behavior, and resolves to take his order literally. Richard
hangs the kitten. This act angers Nathan, but Richard reminds him
of his words and feels triumphant. Ella, infuriated with her son,
punishes him by forcing him to bury the kitten alone that night,
which fills him with shame and terror.
Nathan soon abandons the family to live with another
woman. Without his financial support, Ella and her children are
left constantly hungry. When Richard begs his mother for food, she responds
by informing him that he no longer has a father, which leads Richard
to develop a bitter association between his father and hunger. Later,
a gang of boys attack and rob Richard when Ella sends him to the
grocery store. Ella sends Richard a second time, but the boys only
rob him again. Finally, Ella arms Richard with a heavy stick and
sends him along once more, telling him she will whip him if he comes
back into the house without the groceries. Richard is terrified
to be courting violence, but fights back with the stick when the gang
again attacks him, managing to crack several of the boys on their
heads. The boys run home to their parents, who come outside and
threaten Richard. However, the emboldened Richard tells the parents
that they will get a similar beating if they come after him.
Richard briefly amuses himself by hiding, with other
young boys, behind a row of open-back outhouses to watch people
relieve themselves. To keep her sons out of such trouble, Ella starts
to take them along with her to the white household where she works
as a cook. The constantly hungry Richard resents watching the white
family digging into their plentiful food.
Richard soon finds a new form of amusement: peeping into
a nearby saloon and laughing at the silliness of the drunks who
go in and out. One customer eventually drags the frightened Richard inside
the saloon, and the patrons give him drinks and money if he repeats
various curse words. This activity becomes an obsession for Richard,
and he soon becomes a six-year-old drunkard. Aware of his problem,
Ella beats her son and pleads with him to stop, but she is unable
to change his behavior. Ella finally stops Richard by leaving him
and his brother in the care of an older black woman, who watches
them very closely. Trapped under the woman's watch, Richard loses
his taste for alcohol.
Richard gradually learns to read by leafing through children's books,
and learns to count to one hundred when a benevolent -deliveryman
spends an hour teaching him numbers. His mind increasingly fills
with relentless questions, Richard begins to vaguely understand
that relations between white and black people are very tricky, but
he cannot get anyone to discuss the matter openly with him. He also
has trouble understanding the distinction between blacks and whites,
as his grandmother, a black woman, looks somewhat white. When Richard
hears a rumor that a white man beat a black boy in the neighborhood,
he assumes that the man was the boy's father, believing that only
parents have the right to beat children. Ella corrects her son's
misunderstanding about the man and the boy, but she refuses to discuss
the matter further, leaving Richard puzzled about white people and
wondering why they would beat a black person.
Richard begins the first grade, but he is so terrified
on the first day of school that he cannot speak. At recess a group
of older boys teaches him the meanings of all the curse words he
had been paid to repeat in the saloon. Eager to display this new
knowledge, Richard races home after school and uses soap to write
the curse words on every available window in the neighborhood. Ella,
horrified, forces him to wash all the windows while the neighbors
look on with pity and amusement.
Ella invites the preacher from the local black church
over for a dinner of fried chicken. Richard is very excited about
the relatively fancy meal, but Ella will not let Richard eat any
of the chicken until he finishes his soup, which he is unable to
do in his excitement for the meat. Increasingly distressed as he
watches the preacher devour piece after piece of the precious chicken,
Richard eventually runs out of the room, screaming that the preacher
is going to eat everything. The preacher laughs, but Ella does not
find Richard's dramatic actions amusing, and forbids him any more
dinner.
Ella sues Nathan for child support, but Nathan successfully
convinces the judge that he is already giving all the support he
can. Richard notes that he does not hate his father but merely prefers
not to see him or think of him at all. For this reason, Richard
refuses his mother's requests that he go to his father's job and
beg him for money.
Poverty forces Ella to place Richard and his brother in
an orphanage for a month, where they eat two miserable meals per
day and tend the lawn, pulling grass by hand. The orphanage director, Miss
Simon, apparently takes a liking to Richard and asks him to help
her blot envelopes in her office. Once in Miss Simon's office, however,
Richard is paralyzed with an inexplicable fear and is unable to
do anything she asks of him. Frustrated, Miss Simon drives Richard
from her office. He decides to run away from the orphanage that
night, and when he does so he gets lost. Richard encounters a white
policeman, but he remembers the story of the white man beating the
black boy and fears that the policeman will beat him. The policeman
is friendly, however, and brings Richard back to the orphanage.
Miss Simon promptly lashes Richard for running away.
Ella decides that the family should go to her sister
Maggie's home in Elaine, Arkansas. She takes Richard out of the
orphanage so that he can go to Nathan and plead for the money the
family needs to make the journey. Predictably, Nathan claims that
he has no money to give, and he seems amused by the idea that his
children are going hungry. A slight altercation ensues, and Richard
and his mother say harsh words to the irritatingly jolly Nathan
and his mistress. Nathan then offers Richard a nickel, and though
the boy wants to accept it, he refuses.
Richard muses that this meeting is the last time he would
see his father for twenty-five years. When he next sees Nathan,
the old man is nothing more than a poor, toothless sharecropper.
Richard feels nothing but pity for Nathan as an old man, reflecting
that whereas Nathan failed in his attempt to find a successful life
in the city, Richard himself has done much better, and created a
dramatically new life out of his humble origins.
Analysis
Though it is essentially autobiographical, at times Black
Boy does not resemble a conventional autobiography. Immediately
following Richard's description of his almost-fatal illness, for
example, Wright includes a lengthy passage of lyrical prose that
details his sentimental responses to the natural environment. Phrases
such as the tantalizing melancholy in the tingling scent of burning
hickory wood and the aching glory in masses of clouds burning
gold and purple from an invisible sun shift the focus of the narrative
away from concrete facts and toward more nebulous depictions of
Richard's imaginative mind. These phrases give human qualities to -inanimate
matter and contain highly subjective feelings that we typically
associate with fiction and poetry. Because it contains such purely
artistic passages in addition to concrete biographical information, Black
Boy is often termed an autobiographical novel. Similar
to Maya Angelou's I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, Wright's novel
strikes a creative compromise between fact and fictionin part because
the author wishes to describe events and ideas deeply embedded in
the memories of early childhood.
One of Wright's central concerns in Black Boy is
the insidious nature of racism in the United Statesinsidious because
its roots and effects are very subtle. At first glance, Chapter 1 may
not seem to explore this idea of racism very much at all. Though
Richard resents the well-fed white family that employs his mother
and fears the white policeman who returns him to the orphanage,
these situations contain nothing that resembles outright racial
conflict. Similarly, Richard's failed attempt to learn why a white
man beats a black boy does not say anything overt about racism itself;
it only seems to prove that Richard is interested in learning about
race but is having difficulty doing so. Yet Wright strives to portray
the subtle, sometimes even invisible workings of racism, and the
events in Chapter 1 do contribute to this
portrayal. In his encounters with the white family and the white
policeman, Richard is already beginning to display a strong association
between white people and the injustices of the world. This association
is itself harmful because the young Richard already sees it as natural.
The fact that no one will answer Richard's questions
about race relations reveals that Richard lives not only in a society
of racist whites, but also in an environment that blacks themselves
make worse for him. In a racist society, the oppressors fear curiosity among
the oppressed, as curiosity eventually uncovers the lies that form
the foundation of that oppression. The oppressors therefore use
any means necessary to discourage such curiosity. Under the worst
conditions of oppression, the oppressed even do the oppressors'
dirty work for them by discouraging curiosity among their own ranks.
Indeed, we see that Richard's family discourages his curiosity concerning
racial matters. More broadly, blacks often try to discourage anyone
who could cause trouble for the rest of the group by speaking out
against injustice.
Richard's actions in Chapter 1 reveal
a pattern of unpredictableeither passive-aggressive or over-reactivebehavior
that hinders his ability to peacefully adapt to his surroundings.
For example, when his parents force him to be silent, Richard burns down
the house, resulting in a thorough beating. He rebels against his
father's overbearing demeanor by killing a kitten, only angering his
parents further. Richard overcomes his profound fear of the gang of
boys by fiercely attacking them and threatening their parents. His quiet
fascination with the saloon quickly burgeons into disgraceful alcoholism.
At school, Richard fails to express any enthusiasm for knowledge,
but later channels that enthusiasm into overexpression, proclaiming
all his new, forbidden knowledge on the neighborhood windows. These
behavioral swings demonstrate Richard's inability to interact with
his family, friends, and society in a way consistent with their
expectations. In response, his family, friends, and society punish
him. In some ways, we can see this punishment by Richard's peers
as similar to their lack of interest in engaging his curiosity about
racism. Like curiosity, unpredictable behavior is a dangerous trait
for a subordinate to show in a racist society.
Richard's acquisition of reading and counting skills
are impressive intellectual feats. He accomplishes these feats with
relative ease and speed, needing, for instance, only one hour to
learn how to count to one hundred. More significant, Richard acquires
these skills of his own free willbecause he wants to, not because
he is forced to. As such, Richard's feats of learning reveal his
potential for powerful intelligence and intellectual curiosity,
foreshadowing the quest for knowledge that will shape his life so
decisively.