The work went on to find acclaim in many circles, proving "enormously popular among both the black
cognoscenti as well of the masses of black Americans" and being used widely in oratorical contests; poet
Owen Dodson wrote Johnson in 1932 to tell him that Dodson and his brother had taken first and second place in a poetry-recitation competition with works from that volume. Gates and West particularly note that the work "attempts a
mimetic capturing of the black church sermon... without making recourse to the misspellings and orthographic tricks often employed in representing
black vernacular speech."
Dorothy Canfield Fisher, in a personal letter to the poet to thank him and offer to help promote the collection, praised the work as "heart-shakingly beautiful and original, with the peculiar piercing tenderness and intimacy which seems to me special gifts of the Negro. ...it is a profound satisfaction to find those special qualities so exquisitely expressed." The poem "The Creation" was used in the 1951 film
Five, serving as the soliloquy for the character Charles, played by African-American actor
Charles Lampkin. Lampkin convinced film-maker
Arch Oboler to include excerpts of the poem in the final script of
Five where it would become Lampkin's
soliloquy for his character Charles. This may be the first time that audiences in the USA, Latin America, and Europe were exposed to
African-American poetry, albeit not identified as such in the film. ==Poems==