Analysis Of The Poem 'Still Here' By Langston Hughes

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In his poem “Still Here,” Langston Hughes uses “black English,” or dialect, to make the poem more realistic and help the reader feel like the poet has been through these experiences. This poem is about growing up in tough times. Even though people weren’t nice to him or gave him a hard time, he doesn’t care because what people say about him doesn’t make him who he is. It sounds like Langston Hughes might have grown up in the ghetto because in a lot of his poems he talks about getting respect and pushing through. In the last stanza of the poem, Hughes leaves off the g’s in one line to create dialect. He writes, “Stop laughin’, stop lovin’, stop living’--” (7) This line describes that he doesn’t care what other people say or think about him because