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By Gwendolyn Brooks






About the author: Born in Topeka, Kansas, Gwendolyn Brooks (1917-2000 ) lived most of her life in Chicago. The first African-American author to win the Pulitzer Prize - in 1950, for her poetry collection, Annie Allen - she became famous for portraying the ordinary lives of people in the African-American community. In 1985, she became the first African-American woman to be elected to the National Institute of Arts and Letters.

As a young child, Brooks began reading and writing poetry. Her parents encouraged her interest in literature and took her to poetry readings by African-American authors. Throughout her adolescent years and early twenties, Brooks's poems appeared in various magazines. In 1945, she published a volume of poetry entitled A Street in Hronzville, which won her national recognition as one of America's leading poets. From 1989 until her death, she was Distinguished Professor of Literature at Chicago State University.

The story you are about to read, " Home, " is a chapter from Brooks's novel Maud Martha.

 

 

What had been wanted was this always, this always to last, the talking softly on this porch, with the snake plant in the jardiniere in the southwest corner, and the obstinate slip from Aunt Eppie's magnificent Michigan fern at the left side of the friendly door.

Mama, Maud Martha, and Helen rocked slowly in their rocking chairs, and looked at the late afternoon light on the lawn and at the emphatic iron of the fence and at the poplar tree. These things might soon be theirs no longer. Those shafts and pools of light, the tree, the graceful iron, might soon be viewed possessively by different eyes.

Papa was to have gone that noon, during his lunch hour, to the office of the Home Owners' Loan. If he had not succeeded in getting another extension, they would be leaving this house in which they had lived for more than fourteen years. There was little hope. The Home Owners' Loan was hard. They sat, making their plans.

" We'll be moving into a nice flat somewhere, " said Mama. " Somewhere on South Park, or Michigan, or in Washington Park Court." Those flats, as the girls and Mama knew well, were burdens on wages twice the size of Papa's. This was not mentioned now.

" They're much prettier than this old house, " said Helen. " I have friends I'd just as soon not bring here. And I have other friends that wouldn't come down this far for anything, unless they were in a taxi."

Yesterday, Maud Martha would have attacked her. Tomorrow she might. Today she said nothing. She merely gazed at a little hopping robin in the tree, her tree, and tried to keep the fronts of her eyes dry.

" Well, I do know, " said Mama, turning her hands over and over, " that I've been getting more tire and tire of doing that firing. From October to April, there's firing to be done."

«But lately we've been helping, Harry and I, " said Maud Martha.»And sometimes in March and April and in October, and even in November, we could build a little fire in the fireplace. Sometimes the weather was just right for that."

She knew, from the way they looked at her, that this had been a mistake. They did not want to cry.

But she felt that the little line of white, sometimes ridged with smoked purple, and all that cream-shot saffron 1 would never drift across any western sky except that in back of this house. The rain would drum with as sweet dullness nowhere but here. The birds on South Park were mechanical birds, no better than the poor caught canaries in those " rich" women's sun parlors.

" 'It's just going to kill Papa! " burst out Maud Martha. " He loves this house! He lives for this house! "

" He lives for us, " said Helen. " It's us he loves. He wouldn't want the house, except for us."

'And he'll have us, " added Mama, " wherever."

" You know, " Helen sighed, " if you want to know the truth, this is a relief. If this hadn't come up, we would have gone on, just dragged on, hanging out here forever."

" It might, " allowed Mama, " be an act of God. God may just have reached down and picked up the reins."

" Yes, " Maud Martha cracked in, " that's what you always say - that God knows best."

Her mother looked at her quickly, decided the statement was not suspected, looked away.

Helen saw Papa coming. ”There’s Papa, ” said Helen.

They could not tell a thing from the way Papa was walking. It was that same dear little staccato walk, one shoulder down, and then the other, then repeat, and repeat. They watched his progress. He passed the Kennedys', he passed the vacant lot, he passed Mrs. Blakemore's. They wanted to hurl themselves over the fence, into the street, and shake the truth out of his collar. He opened his gate - the gate - and still his stride and face told them nothing.

" Hello, " he said.

Mama got up and followed him through the front door. The girls knew better than to go in too.

Presently Mama's head emerged. Her eyes were lamps turned on.

" It's all right, " she exclaimed. " He got it. It's all over. Everything is all right.”

The door slammed shut. Mama's footsteps hurried away.

" I think, " said Helen, rocking rapidly, " I think I'll give a party. I haven't given a party since I was eleven. I'd like some of my friends to just casually see that we're homeowners."

 


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