A Guide to the Langston Hughes Collection Hughes, Langston. 8870-h

A Guide to the Langston Hughes Collection

A Collection in the
Clifton Waller Barrett Library of American Literature
Accession number 8870-h


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Funded in part by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Processed by: Special Collections Department Staff

Repository
University of Virginia. Library. Special Collections Dept. Alderman Library University of Virginia Charlottesville, Virginia 22903 USA
Collection Number
8870-h
Title
Langston Hughes Collection 1942-1943
Extent
3 items
Creator
Location
Language
English

Administrative Information

Access Restrictions

Collection is open to research.

Use Restrictions

See the University of Virginia Library’s use policy.

Preferred Citation

Langston Hughes Collection, Accession 8870-h, Special Collections Department, University of Virginia Library

Acquisition Information

Purchase 1995 November 18

Funding Note

Funded in part by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities

Significant Persons Associated With the Collection

  • Felix Morisseau-Leroy
  • Hoffman Reynolds Hays
  • Hoffman Reynolds Hays
  • Jacques Roumain
  • Jose Antonio Fernandez de Castro
  • Langston Hughes
  • Lino Novas Calvo
  • Nellie Campobello
  • Nicolas Guillen
  • [Hoffman Reynolds] Hays

Item Listing

Letters
  • Langston Hughes , New York City, to [Hoffman Reynolds] Hays (1904 - ), reviewer for Poetry magazine
    1942 Jul 4
    TLS, 2 p.

    [Hughes promises to try to find information about the Haitian writer Jacques Roumain (1907-1944) and his novel La Montaigne Ensourcelle , mentioning another Haitian poet, Felix Morisseau-Leroy , as a possible source of information; discusses his influence on Roumain and Nicolas Guillen (1902-?), "Roumain has had, so far as I know, no book of poems, but has appeared in magazines, etc. His poetry is free verse, mostly Negro in subject matter rather than in form. Both he and Guillen say they've been influenced by my work, but Roumain toward the free verse-race matter side, and Guillen toward the use of folk forms and idioms, the Cuba n equivalent of my blues. Guillen was writing Spanish free verse when I first met him around 1930 and hadn't yet touched the dialect-folk idiom that made him famous. I pointed out to him then the music of the Cuban son, I mean the word-music and rhythm aside from the melodies. And a year or two later he sent me his early son poems." He also discusses another Cuban writer identified as Francisca who published Cartucho , her memories about the Mexican revolution, under her family name of Nellie Campobello , in 1931. Hughes suggests that Hays look in Revista De Habana by Jose Antonio Fernandez de Castro for more information. About Francisca's poetry Hughes says, "Her poetry is very un-Spanish in that it is very simple, very free, very un-ornate and clear, like early unrhymed Millay, but more child- like." He also calls the short story "That Night the Dead Came Out" by Lino Novas Calvo one of the best he ever read.]

  • Langston Hughes to Hoffman Reynolds Hays
    1942 Jul 13
    ALS, 1 p.

    [supplies additional information about Jacques Roumain gathered from Felix Morisseau-Leroy , including his birth in Port-au-Prince, Haiti , additional books of essays, Fantoches and Proie Et Lombre , and his present activities in establishing an anthropological museum for the Haitian government]

  • Langston Hughes , New York City, to Hoffman Reynolds Hays , Lakeville, Connecticut
    [1942 Jul 25]
    APCS, 1 p.

    [thanks Hays for the swell review in Poetry and sends him the correct address for Jose Antonio Fernandez de Castro ]