The Souls of Black FolkMain MenuThe ForethoughtI. Of Our Spiritual StrivingsOf Our Spiritual StrivingsII. Of the Dawn of FreedomIII. Of Booker T. Washington and OthersIV. Of the Meaning of ProgressV. Of the Wings of AtalantaVI. Of the Training of Black MenVII. Of the Black BeltVIII. Of the Quest of the Golden FleeceIX. Of the Sons of Master and ManX. Of the Faith of the FathersChapter 10 Souls of Black FolkXI. Of The Passing of the First-BornXII. Of Alexander CrummellXIII. Of the Coming of JohnXIV. Of the Sorrow SongsThe AfterthoughtRichard Rathaf60df475385e6d92b1b582969f6b0cfa3efb2b4Nalani Roedc013c9da5bf65182fbca0f60fcc4ccf32095e55Kelsey Kato2b2a0a1f84884c4c68ca974fece871406fad63daJoelle Byarsb85408086f98ce6aa8924aa5d8e9f78c793e87fdElizabeth Volosciucde1b428ae7a36ae69a3516d94df7606eb8b575eeAva Ladnerd8cb49a7abc8950765f1a214558b047e32bca588Alysia M Berglund0610e1ec09a263670270ed4a2e881f8527e92967
About the Bars of Music
12018-02-09T04:19:14+00:00Richard Rathaf60df475385e6d92b1b582969f6b0cfa3efb2b4494What the music saidplain2018-04-01T07:49:15+00:00Richard Rathaf60df475385e6d92b1b582969f6b0cfa3efb2b4
The bars of music within this text are used to help provide the reader with a different experience for each chapter. Du Bois uses the inclusion of the music to convey moods and tones he describes in The Forethought as, "some echo of haunting melody from the only American music which welled up from black souls in the dark past."