a daily journal, of sorts

Wednesday, June 2

On Being Black

Just came across this striking excerpt in The National Republic's email newsletter. I've never felt what the author feels, but it's an eloquent bit.

On Being Black
by W. E. B. Du Bois

I arise at seven. The milkman has neglected me. He pays little attention to colored districts. My white neighbor glares elaborately. I walk softly, lest I disturb him. The children jeer as I pass to work. The women in the street car withdraw their skirts or prefer to stand. The policeman is truculent. The elevator man hates to serve Negroes. My job is insecure because the white union wants it and does not want me. I try to lunch, but no place near will serve me. I go forty blocks to Marshall's, but the Committee of Fourteen closes Marshall's; they say that white women frequent it.


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