Rachel Blau Duplessis observes that the poem depicts "the blow of social learning of one’s place in a racial/racist order", and notes that "the central
quatrain proposes the equality of the children in size, demeanor, and in age, indeed, in every way but one", and that the word "whit" not only "means 'particle' or 'iota'", but also "irresistibly suggests both 'white' and 'wit.'"
Cary Nelson argues that Cullen's preference for traditional and "childlike" forms of poetry means that the word "
nigger" is a "violation" that is "more disturbing and effective than its appearance in a
modernist collage would be." ==References==