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Introduction
Langston Hughes book written
in 1958, ‘’Thank you ma’am’’ is set in Harlem New York during a time that New
York experienced rapid population growth. It explores the effects of kindness
and trust. A young boy snatches a purse from an elderly woman, but unluckily he
fails to take off and is captured by the woman who holds her by the throat. He
expects the woman to call the police but the woman offers to take him home,
clean him up, feed him, and eventually she offers him money to buy what he
wanted. The motive of the boy was to snatch the purse and run not knowing what
was in it. The woman later tells him that all he could have done was ask.
Philosophical Approach
The story presents a life in
society where people are willing to forgive and help even after being offended.
Mrs. Jones does the unexpected by showing kindness to a boy who not only is a
stranger but also tried to snatch her purse. It points out that no matter the
circumstance people should be given time to explain their story before they are
judged. She brings out the morals that most of the time society ignores. She
has a past that she is not proud of her but chooses and this pushes her to show
Roger ways in which he can do the right thing.
Mankind has different
relationships with God. Mrs. Jones appears to know something about God as she
tells the boy, ‘’I have done things, too, which I would not tell you
son-neither tell God, if he already didn’t know’’. She appears to know God but
she is not ready to repent or tell God about her past and things she might have
done
The story’s moral as
depicted through the actions of Mrs. Jones and Roger is both explicit and
implicit. Mrs. Jones tries to teach Roger ways in which he can become morally
upright, and explains to him that she had done bad things but in her past. She
is trying to tell Roger that no matter how many bad things he has done, he can
always change and be morally upright.
The author appears to be
keen on repentance though he lets his characters be depicted as immoral people.
But he is quick to let the reader know that one can be a very bad person and
change to become morally upright. He depicts God as someone supernatural who
already knows before they are asked. The author is not religious but he knows
God and through Mrs. Jones he tells the writer the importance of repentance.
Langston believes that good
and evil are not miles apart. By explaining the crime and making the reader
understand that it was out of necessity that roger wanted to steal form Mrs.
Jones. He is trying to make us understand that Roger is not really a bad boy
but he is only trapped in a very difficult situation.
The author identifies
situations where good and evil conflict. Mrs. Jones tries to be good to a boy
who had stolen from him. It is human nature that the boy would have been
punished or taken to the police. Mrs. Jones takes it to herself to teach the
boy the goodness of being honest. She even puts a suggestion to her that she
could have asked for the money. Stealing is an evil in society and Mrs. Jones
knows that punishing the boy will not help him. Instead he gives him a choice
to differentiate between living honestly and stealing.
Langston tries to show that
every human has their way of associating with other people in a community. Mrs.
Jones chose not to punish the boy and thus it raises the question about how
someone else could have handled the situation. He tries to make us understand
that many people could have taken him to the police. Roger also expected the same because he asks
Mrs. Jones whether she was going to take her to the police.
Conclusion
Stealing is a bad vice that
should not be condoned in society. But when Rogers tries to steal from Mrs.
Jones and she forgives him and even offers him money to buy shoes, it raises
questions on morals and what society is doing towards improving the moral
standards. Mrs. Jones connects with the boy and understands his background and
offers to help not only by giving him money but by letting him choose between
good and evil. He gives him the opportunity to run but he doesn’t. The author
has succeeded in bringing the relationship between evil and good to test.
Work cited
Langhston Hughes. Thank You, Ma'am.
London: EBook Versions, 1958. Print.
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