Langston Hughes: "Life is
Fine"
Summary:
The
speaker goes to the river and sits down by the bank to think. He cannot
concentrate so he jumps into the water and sinks. He surfaces and cries out
twice. If the water had not been so frigid, he would have died, he says, “But
it was Cold in that water! It was cold!”
He
takes the elevator to the sixteenth floor of his building, where he thinks
about his “baby” and considers jumping. He stands up there and yells, and if it
had not been so high, he might have leapt off and died. “But it was High up
there! it was high!” He says.
He comments that since he is still living, he might as
well live on. He might have died for love but he was born to live. He says to
his baby that he would “dogged” if she were to see him die. He concludes, “Life
is fine! Fine as wine! Life is fine!”
Analysis:
The spirited and jaunty “Life is Fine” is not one of Hughes’s more
well-known works, but has many similarities to his other poems. It tells the
story of a man with a jubilant spirit and the ability to remain optimistic in
the face of personal despair. It is energetic and musical, and the structure
resembles that of a blues song. The poem has six stanzas with a varied refrain
at the end of each one. Hughes utilizes frequent repetition to emphasize his
message.
The
speaker describes going to the river to think, but finding himself unable to do
so. He decides to commit suicide by drowning himself. However, instead of
sinking like a stone, he keeps returning to the surface and “hollering” loudly.
The freezing temperature of the water awakens his mind and body, preventing him
from surrendering to death. In the first refrain, he describes how cold the
water is, painting a vivid image of himself shivering and ejecting himself from
the water repeatedly; he cannot seem to let death catch hold.
In
the third stanza, the speaker clarifies that his inner turmoil is due to a
romantic relationship gone sour. He takes the elevator up sixteen floors and
thinks about how sad he is about his "baby." He considers jumping
down but realizes how high it is and decides to refrain. Like the water's
temperature, the speaker uses the height of the building as the reason for his
decision not to commit suicide.
The
poem's tone shifts during the fifth stanza. Finally, the speaker concedes that
since his suicide attempts "failed," he might as well remain living.
Sure, he says, he could have died for love, but “for living’ I was born.” By
staring death in the face, the speaker has rediscovered his sense of purpose.
He acknowledges that he might never find complete peace from the vicissitudes
of life, he might still holler and cry sometimes, but he has decided that he
will persevere and not let his “sweet baby” see him die. His last refrain gives
the poem its title: “Life is fine! Fine as wine!
Life is fine!”
In
this poem, Hughes revisits a common theme in his work: perseverance. He
understands the plight of his people and crafts a vulnerable character here who
often considers giving up on life, but can never quite follow through - meaning
that he still has something to live for. By coming so close to death, the
speaker in "Life is Fine" finds a renewed desire to live.
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