"Cora
Unashamed"
by
Langston Hughes
Melton was one of those miserable in-between little places, not large
enough to
be a town, nor small enough to be a village that is, a village in the
rural,
charming sense of the word. Melton had no charm about it.
It was
merely a nondescript collection of houses and buildings in a
region of
farms—one of those sad American places with sidewalks, but no paved
street;
electric lights, but no sewage; a station, but no trains that stopped,
save a
jerky local, morning and evening. And it was 150 miles from any
city at
all—even
Cora Jenkins was one of the least of the citizens of Melton. She
was what
the people referred to when they wanted to be polite, as a Negress, and
when
they wanted to be rude, as a nigger—sometimes adding the word "wench"
for no good reason, for Cora was usually an inoffensive soul, except
that she
sometimes cussed.
She had been in Melton for forty years. Born there. Would die
there
probably. She worked for the Studevants, who treated her like a
dog. She stood it. Had to stand it; or work for poorer
white folks
who would treat her worse; or go jobless. Cora was like a tree—once
rooted, she
stood, in spite of storms and strife, wind , and rocks, in the earth.
She was the Studevants' maid of all work—washing, ironing, cooking,
scrubbing,
taking care of kids, nursing old folks, making fires, carrying water.
Cora, bake three cakes for Mary's birthday tomorrow night. You
Cora, give
Rover a bath in that tar soap I bought. Cora, take Ma some
Jell-O, and
don't let her have even a taste of that raisin pie. She'll keep
us up all
night if you do. Cora, iron my stocking. Cora, come
here...Cora,
put...Cora...Cora...Cora! Cora!
And Cora would answer, "Yes, ma'm."
The Studevants thought they owned her, and they were perfectly right:
they
did. There was something about the teeth in the trap of economic
circumstance that kept her in their power practically all her life—in
the
Studevant kitchen, cooking; in the Studevant parlor, sweeping; in the
Studevant
backyard, hanging clothes.
You want to know how that could be? How a trap could close so
tightly? Here is the outline:
Cora was the oldest of a family of eight children—the Jenkins
niggers.
The only Negroes in Melton, thank God! Where they came from
originally—that is, the old folks—God knows. The kids were born
there. The old folks are still there now: Pa drives a junk
wagon.
The old woman ails around the house, ails and quarrels. Seven
kids are
gone. Only Cora remains. Cora simply couldn't go, with
nobody else
to help take care of Ma. And before that she couldn't go,
with
nobody to see that her brothers and sisters got through school (she the
oldest,
and Ma ailing). And before that—well, somebody had to help Ma
look after
one baby behind another that kept on coming.
As a child Cora had no playtime. She always had a little brother,
or a
little sister in her arms. Bad, crying bratty babies, hungry and
mean. In the eighth grade she quit school and went to work with
the
Studevants.
After that, she ate better. Half day's work at first, helping Ma
at home
the rest of the time. Then full days, bringing home her pay to
feed her
father's children. The old man was rather a drunkard. What
little
money he made from closet cleaning, ash hauling, and junk dealing he
spent
mostly on the stuff that makes you forget you have eight kids.
He passed the evenings telling long, comical lies to the white riffraff
of the
town, and drinking licker. When his horse died, Cora's money went
for a
new one to haul her pa and his rickety wagon around. When the
mortgage
money came due, Cora's wages kept the man from taking the roof from
over their
heads. When Pa got in jail, Cora borrowed ten dollars from Mrs.
Studevant
and got him out.
Cora stinted, and Cora saved, and wore the Studevants' old clothes, and
ate the
Studevants' leftover food, and brought her pay home. Brothers and
sisters
grew up. The boys, lonesome, went away, as far as they could from
Melton. One by one, the girls left too, mostly in disgrace.
"Ruinin' ma name," Pa Jenkins said, "ruinin' ma good name!
They can't go out berryin' but what they come back in disgrace."
There was something about the cream-and-tan Jenkins girls that
attracted the white
farmhands.
Even Cora, the humble, had a lover once. He came to town on a
freight
train (long ago now), and worked at the livery stable. (That was
before
autos got to be so common.) Everybody said he was an
I.W.W.
Cora didn't care. He was the first man and the last she ever
remembered
wanting. She had never known a colored lover. There weren't
any
around. That was not her fault.
This white boy, Joe, he always smelt like the horses. He was some
kind of
foreigner. Had an accent, and yellow hair, big hands, and gray
eyes.
It was summer. A few blocks beyond the Studevant's house, meadows
and
orchards and sweet fields stretched away to the far horizon, at night,
stars in
the velvet sky. Moon sometimes. Crickets and katydids and
lightning
bugs. The scent of grass. Cora waiting. That boy,
Joe, a
cigarette spark far off, whistling in the dark. Love didn't take
long—Cora with the scent of the Studevants' supper about her, and a
cheap
perfume. Joe, big and strong and careless as the horses he took
care of,
smelling like the stable.
Ma would quarrel because Cora came home late, or because none of the
kids had
written for three or four weeks, or because Pa was drunk again.
Thus the
summer passed, a dream of big hands and gray eyes.
Cora didn't go anywhere to have her child. Nor tried to hide
it.
When the baby grew big within her, she didn't feel that it was a
disgrace. The Studevants told her to go home and stay
there. Joe
left town. Pa cussed. Ma cried. One April
morning the
kid was born. She had gray eyes, and Cora called her Josephine,
after
Joe.
Cora was humble and shameless before the fact of the child. There
were no
Negroes in Melton to gossip, and she didn't care what the white people
said. They were in another world. Of course, she hadn't
expected to
marry Joe, or keep him. He was of that other world, too.
But the
child was hers—a living bridge between two worlds. Let people
talk.
Cora went back to work at the Studevants'— coming home at night to
nurse her
kid, and quarrel with Ma. About that time, Mrs Art Studevant had
a child,
too, and Cora nursed it. The Studevants' little girl was named
Jessie. As the two children began to walk and talk, Cora
sometimes
brought Josephine to play with Jessie—until the Studevants objected,
saying she
could get her work done better if she left her child at home.
"Yes, ma'm," said Cora.
But in a little while they didn't need to tell Cora to leave her child
at home,
for Josephine died of whooping cough. One rosy afternoon, Cora
saw the
little body go down into the ground in a white casket that cost four
weeks'
wages.
Since Ma was ailing, Pa, smelling of licker, stood with her at the
grave.
The two of them alone. Cora was not humble before the fact of
death. As she turned away from the hole, tears came — but at the
same time
a stream of curses so violent that they made the grave tenders look up
in
startled horror.
She cussed out God for taking away the life that she herself had
given.
She screamed, "My baby! God damn it! My baby! I bear her and you take
her
away!" She looked at the sky where the sun was setting and yelled in
defiance. Pa was amazed and scared. He pulled her up on his
rickety
wagon and drove off, clattering down the road between green fields and
sweet
meadows that stretched away to the far horizon. All through the
ugly town
Cora wept and cursed, using all the bad words she had learned from Pa
in his
drunkenness.
The next week she went back to the Studevants. She was gentle and
humble
in the face of life—she loved their baby. In the afternoons on
the back
porch, she would pick little Jessie up and rock her to sleep, burying
her dark
face in the milky smell of the white child's hair.
II
The years passed. Pa and Ma Jenkins only dried up a little.
Old man
Studevant died. The old lady had two strokes. Mrs. Art
Studevant
and her husband began to look their age, graying hair and sagging
stomachs. The children were grown, or nearly so. Kenneth
took over
the management of the hardware store that Grandpa had left. Jack
went off
to college. Mary was a teacher. Only Jessie remained a
child—her
last year in high school. Jessie, nineteen now, and rather slow
in her
studies, graduating at last. In the fall she would go to
Cora hated to think about her going away. In her heart she had
adopted Jessie.
In that big and careless household it was always Cora who stood like a
calm and
sheltering tree for Jessie to run to in her troubles. As a child,
when
Mrs. Art spanked her, as soon as she could, the tears still streaming,
Jessie
would find her way to the kitchen and Cora. At each school
term's
end, when Jessie has usually failed in some of her subjects (she quite
often
failed, being a dull child), it was Cora who saw the report card first
with the
bad marks on it. Then Cora would devise some way of breaking the
news
gently to the old folks.
Her mother was always a little ashamed of stupid Jessie, for Mrs. Art
was the
civic and social leader of Melton, president of the Women's Club three
years
straight, and one of the pillars of her church. Mary, the elder,
the
teacher, would follow with dignity in her footsteps, but Jessie!
That
child! Spankings in her youth, and scoldings now, did nothing to
Jessie's inner
being. She remained a plump, dull, freckled girl, placid and
strange. Everybody found fault with her but Cora.
In the kitchen Jessie bloomed. She laughed. She
talked. She
was sometimes even witty. And she learned to cook
wonderfully. With
Cora, everything seemed so simple—not hard and involved like algebra,
or Latin
grammar, or the civic problems of Mama's club, or the sermons at
church.
Nowhere in Melton, nor with anyone, did Jessie feel so comfortable as
with Cora
in the kitchen. She knew her mother looked down on her as a
stupid
girl. And with her father there was no bond. He was always
too busy
buying and selling to bother with kids. And often he was off in
the
city. Old doddering Grandma made Jessie sleepy and
sick.
Cousin Nora (Mother's cousin) was as stiff and prim as a minister's
daughter. And Jessie's older brothers and sister went their ways,
seeing
Jessie hardly at all, except at the big table at mealtimes.
Like all the unpleasant things in the house, Jessie was left to
Cora. And
Cora was happy. To have a child to raise, a child the same age as
her
Josephine would have been, gave her a purpose in life, a warmth inside
herself. It was Cora who nursed and mothered and petted and loved
the
dull little Jessie through the years. And now Jessie was a young
woman,
graduating (late) from high school.