If We Must Die poem answer Key | If We Must Die literary devices | If We Must Die rhyme scheme | Synopsis of 'If We Must Die | Tone of If We Must die | If We Must Die essay | If we must die PDF | To whom did the author direct the message of the poem 'If We Must Die
IF WE MUST DIE. by Claude McKay
If we must die, let it not be like hogs
Hunted and penned in an inglorious spot.
While round us bark the mad and angry dogs
Making their mock at our accursed lot
If we must die, o let us nobly die
So that our precious blood may not be shed
In vain; then the monsters we defy
Shall be constrained to honor us though dead.
O kinsmen! We must meet our common foe
Though far outnumbered. Let us show us brave
And for their thousand blows, deal one death blow
What though before us lies the open grave?
Like men we’ll face the murderous cowardly pack
Pressed to the wall dying but fighting back.
INTRODUCTION
Claude McKay was born in 1890 in Jamaica. He went to Kansas to study
agriculture at the time when Ku Klux Klan was highly active. He was
therefore forced to move to New York in 1914. In 1919 Washington DC
newspaper gave stories of an alleged (suspected) sexual assault that was
said to be committed by an African American. The stories sparked (caused)
a series of twenty riots during the summer of 1919, beginning with white
lynch mob (murderous group) that targeted blacks in Washington. There were
28 public lynching (killings) in the first half of the year and the
following summer and fall came to be known as “The Red Summer” of 1919.
This was the motivation behind McKay’s “If We Must Die”
Related Posts
He wrote the poem amid the violence and bloodshed of 1919, and in this
poem he encourages his community to take action and fight back.
THEMATIC ANALYSIS.
SACRIFICE
In the fight against oppression, sacrifice is a valuable commodity. Few
People need to sacrifice their lives so that the majority may live in
peace. In this poem the poet (McKay) calls for actions against the enemy
(foe). However, he shows that the struggle may mean death. But if they
must die, it is better to die fighting so that they may be honoured later
than dying while doing nothing.
He says
If we must die, o let us nobly die
So that our precious blood may not be shed
In vain! …
HUMILIATION/TORTURE/OPPRESSION
The poet and his fellow kinsmen go through a series of torture and
mistreatment from their enemy. They are arrested with no reason, jailed
and killed like pigs. This is a situation which affected most African
Americans in the time of racial injustice in America and when “Jim Crow laws” were in effect. The poet shows the experience they are going through by
saying;
If we must die, let it not be like hogs
Hunted and penned in an inglorious spot.
While round us bark the mad and angry dogs
MOTALITY (DEATH)
Due to this politically charged situation death at least seems the best
thing to help a person sort out what is important in life. The speaker
speaks about death in a more practical sense - he is actually facing it.
It is not the question of whether he will die or what will happen when he
dies it is about how he will meet death. To him death is an opportunity to
show strength, nobility and purpose.
If we must die, o let us nobly die
So that our precious blood may not be shed
In vain; then the monsters we defy
Shall be constrained to honor us though dead.
AWARENESS.
The persona is aware that they are oppressed by their whites
counterparts. He is also aware that whether they fight or not they are
bound to die one day. So it is noble to die fighting than to die doing
nothing. For him if they die fighting, their enemies will honour them
although they are dead.
What though before us lies the open grave?
Like men we’ll face the murderous cowardly pack
Pressed to the wall dying but fighting back
GUIDING QUESTIONS
a) What is the poem about?
The poem is about the torture, humiliation and oppression the people of
African origin were suffering in America and their determination to fight
back. The poet shows that it is noble to die fighting against your enemy
than to die doing nothing because after all we are bound to die someday
whether we fight or not.
b) What type of the poem is this?
It is a sonnet. It is made up of only one stanza with 14 verses.
c) Comment on the rhyming scheme.
The poem has a regular rhyming scheme that goes;
ABAB CDCD EFEF GG.
d) What is the tone and mood of the poem/poet?
The tone is serious and angry and it creates the hatred mood towards the
oppressor.
e) Who is the persona? How do you know?
The persona is a black American who is oppressed, humiliated and
persecuted. We know this from the history of the poet and the fact that
blacks were hunted, penned (locked in small cells) and killed like hogs
(pigs) in America.
If we must die, let it not be like hogs
Hunted and penned in an inglorious spot.
While round us bark the mad and angry dogs
f) What sufferings does the person experience?
They are hunted (arrested), penned (locked in small cells) with angry and
mad dogs guarding them, and they were killed without fair trial.
g) Is the persona afraid of death? Give reasons to justify your
answer.
The persona is surely not afraid of death. The reasons for this
are;
o When you die fighting people will honour you. i.e. it is noble to die
fighting. “let us nobly die”
o Whether he fights or not, he is bound to die someday. “What though before us lies an open grave?”
h) Comment on the figures of speech and poetic devices
i. Rhetorical question
o What though before us lies an open grave?”
ii. Metaphor. He compares the enemy/oppressors with the monsters. ‘The monsters we defy’ and “murderous cowardly pack”
iii. Images
The poet paints the pictures of;
Visual image. Hogs (pigs) = pigs are killed mercilessly so they should not die the
same death.
Barking Mad and angry dogs = this is the picture of the oppressor who guards
the Blacks not to escape from punishment.
iv. Symbolism
“An Open grave” this symbolizes death. Which is to say whether we fight or
not death is there waiting for us. Death is the ultimate
finality of human life.
‘Blood” is a symbol for sacrifice
v. Repetition
The phrase “if we must die” is repeated for emphasis
vi. Hyperbole. “For their thousand blows”
vii. Simile. If we must die let it not be like hogs
viii. Satire/Irony
The poet mocks both the enemy and himself.
“Like men we’ll face the murderous cowardly pack.” He mocks the oppressor that he is coward like a group of wolves. But
how can someone coward press you to the wall dying. He shows that he is
himself weak/inferior to the enemy. Also shows that the enemy is capable
of dealing a thousand death blows but he can deal only one.
i) The poet calls his enemy “the murderous cowardly pack” what does that mean?
A pack is a group of dogs or wolves hunting together. He compares the
oppressors as a cowardly pack because the Whites were hunting Africans in
notorious mobs and not individually. This shows that they were coward as
well.
j) To whom is the speaker talking?
The speaker calls for action from his fellow kinsmen (the oppressed) or
more specifically Black-Americans.
“Oh Kinsmen! We must meet our common foe”
k) Is the poem relevant today?
ü The poem is still relevant because oppression, injustice and racial
prejudice are still prevalent in different parts of the world. Awareness,
sacrifice and determination are still needed when it comes to fighting for
our rights.
ü Also it is very true that those who died fighting during this period of
racial injustice in America are honoured until now in the history of
America. Think of Martin Luther King Jr, and Malcolm X.
Note! A free download pdf may contain a password, you have to join our groups after downloading and ask for the documents password
If We Must Die poem answer Key | If We Must Die literary devices | If We Must Die rhyme scheme | Synopsis of 'If We Must Die | Tone of If We Must die | If We Must Die essay | If we must die PDF | To whom did the author direct the message of the poem 'If We Must Die