Black No More

by

George S. Schuyler

Henry Givens is the leader of the Knights of Nordica, Mrs. Givens’s husband and Helen’s father. He is an ex-evangelist and former member of the Ku Klux Klan, where he siphoned money out of the Klan’s treasury until the organization declined. When the Black-No-More treatment comes out, he founds the Knights of Nordica both because he believes in white supremacy and because he wants to regain the wealth he acquired with the KKK. When Max arrives in town claiming to be an anthropologist who also believes in white supremacy, Givens immediately hires him as his second-in-command, and Max marries Helen soon after. Givens is relieved about this arrangement, knowing that the Knights will remain in the family after he retires. As the Republicans gain power in the South, Givens starts giving radio broadcasts to spread his ideas. He gains so much support that he secures the Democratic nomination for the 1936 presidential election. As public alarm grows over Black-No-More and the fact that so many Black Americans are turning white, it appears that the conservative Democrats have the upper hand in the election. However, a report comes out revealing that many top Democrats, including Givens, have Black ancestry, thus prompting mobs of people to come after Givens. As a result, Givens, Givens’s wife, Helen, and Matthew all flee the country together. Givens is an example of how the wealthy and powerful take advantage of racial divisions to gain further wealth and power.

Rev. Henry Givens Quotes in Black No More

The Black No More quotes below are all either spoken by Rev. Henry Givens or refer to Rev. Henry Givens. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Racism and Oppression Theme Icon
).
Chapter 4 Quotes

Unlike Givens, he had no belief in the racial integrity nonsense nor any confidence in the white masses whom he thought were destined to flock to the Knights of Nordica. On the contrary he despised and hated them. He had the average Negro’s justifiable fear of the poor whites and only planned to use them as a stepladder to the real money.

Related Characters: Max Disher / Matthew Fisher, Rev. Henry Givens
Related Symbols: The Knights of Nordica
Page Number: 47-48
Explanation and Analysis:

Matthew, who sat on the platform alongside old man Givens viewed the spectacle with amusement mingled with amazement. He was amused because of the similarity of this meeting to the religious orgies of the more ignorant Negroes and amazed that earlier in the evening he should have felt any qualms about lecturing to these folks on anthropology, a subject with which neither he nor his hearers were acquainted. He quickly saw that these people would believe anything that was shouted at them loudly and convincingly enough. He knew what would fetch their applause and bring in their memberships and he intended to repeat it over and over.

Related Characters: Max Disher / Matthew Fisher, Rev. Henry Givens
Related Symbols: The Knights of Nordica
Page Number: 53
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 6 Quotes

The great mass of white workers, however, was afraid to organize and fight for more pay because of a deepset fear that the Negroes would take their jobs. They had heard of black labor taking the work of white labor under the guns of white militia, and they were afraid to risk it. They had first read of the activities of Black-No-More, Incorporated, with a secret feeling akin to relief but after the orators of the Knights of Nordica and the editorials of The Warning began to portray the menace confronting them, they forgot about their economic ills and began to yell for the blood of Dr. Crookman and his associates. Why, they began to argue, one couldn’t tell who was who! Herein lay the fundamental cause of all their ills. Times were hard, they reasoned, because there were so many white Negroes in their midst taking their jobs and undermining their American standard of living. None of them had ever attained an American standard of living to be sure, but that fact never occurred to any of them. So they flocked to the meetings of the Knights of Nordica and night after night sat spellbound while Rev. Givens, who had finished the eighth grade in a one-room country school, explained the laws of heredity and spoke eloquently of the growing danger of black babies.

Related Characters: Max Disher / Matthew Fisher, Rev. Henry Givens
Related Symbols: The Knights of Nordica, Babies
Page Number: 82
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9 Quotes

Rev. Givens, fortified with a slug of corn, advanced nervously to the microphone, fingering his prepared address. He cleared his throat and talked for upwards of an hour during which time he successfully avoided saying anything that was true, the result being that thousands of telegrams and long- distance telephone calls of congratulation came in to the studio. In his long address he discussed the foundations of the Republic, anthropology, psychology, miscegenation, cooperation with Christ, getting right with God, curbing Bolshevism, the bane of birth control, the menace of the Modernists, science versus religion, and many other subjects of which he was totally ignorant. The greater part of his time was taken up in a denunciation of Black-No-More, Incorporated, and calling upon the Republican administration of President Harold Goosie to deport the vicious Negroes at the head of it or imprison them in the federal penitentiary. When he had concluded “In the name of our Savior and Redeemer, Jesus Christ, Amen,” he retired hastily to the washroom to finish his half-pint of corn.

Related Characters: Max Disher / Matthew Fisher, Rev. Henry Givens, Harold Goosie
Related Symbols: The Knights of Nordica
Page Number: 116
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 11 Quotes

“There was so much of this mixing between whites and blacks of the various classes that very early the colonies took steps to put a halt to it. They managed to prevent intermarriage but they couldn’t stop intermixture. You know the old records don’t lie. They’re right there for everybody to see…

“A certain percentage of these Negroes,” continued Buggerie, quite at ease now and seemingly enjoying his dissertation, “in time lightened sufficiently to be able to pass for white. They then merged with the general population. Assuming that there were one thousand such cases fifteen generations ago—and we have proof that there were more—their descendants now number close to fifty million souls. Now I maintain that we dare not risk publishing this information. Too many of our very first families are touched right here in Richmond!

Related Characters: Samuel Buggerie (speaker), Max Disher / Matthew Fisher, Dr. Junius Crookman, Rev. Henry Givens, Arthur Snobbcraft
Page Number: 144
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 12 Quotes

Helen felt a wave of relief go over her. There was no feeling of revulsion at the thought that her husband was a Negro. There once would have been but that was seemingly centuries ago when she had been unaware of her remoter Negro ancestry. She felt proud of her Matthew. She loved him more than ever. They had money and a beautiful, brown baby. What more did they need? To hell with the world! To hell with society! Compared to what she possessed, thought Helen, all talk of race and color was damned foolishness. She would probably have been surprised to learn that countless Americans at that moment were thinking the same thing.

“‘Well,” said Bunny, grinning, “it sure is good to be able to admit that you’re a jigwalk once more.”

“Yes, Bunny,” said old man Givens, “I guess we’re all niggers now.”

Related Characters: Rev. Henry Givens (speaker), Bunny Brown (speaker), Max Disher / Matthew Fisher, Helen Givens/The Blonde Girl, Matthew Fisher Jr.
Page Number: 155
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 13 Quotes

What was the world coming to, if the blacks were whiter than the whites? Many people in the upper class began to look askance at their very pale complexions. If it were true that extreme whiteness was evidence of the possession of Negro blood, of having once been a member of a pariah class, then surely it were well not to be so white!

Related Characters: Dr. Junius Crookman, Rev. Henry Givens, Harold Goosie
Page Number: 178
Explanation and Analysis:

One Sunday morning Surgeon-General Crookman, in looking over the rotogravure section of his favorite newspaper, saw a photograph of a happy crowd of Americans arrayed in the latest abbreviated bathing suits on the sands at Cannes. In the group he recognized Hank Johnson, Chuck Foster, Bunny Brown and his real Negro wife, former Imperial Grand Wizard and Mrs. Givens and Matthew and Helen Fisher. All of them, he noticed, were quite as dusky as little Matthew Crookman Fisher, who played in a sandpile at their feet.

Dr. Crookman smiled wearily and passed the section to his wife.

Related Characters: Max Disher / Matthew Fisher, Dr. Junius Crookman, Rev. Henry Givens, Helen Givens/The Blonde Girl, Bunny Brown, Hank Johnson, Charles “Chuck” Foster, Matthew Fisher Jr., Mrs. Givens
Page Number: 180-181
Explanation and Analysis:
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Rev. Henry Givens Quotes in Black No More

The Black No More quotes below are all either spoken by Rev. Henry Givens or refer to Rev. Henry Givens. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Racism and Oppression Theme Icon
).
Chapter 4 Quotes

Unlike Givens, he had no belief in the racial integrity nonsense nor any confidence in the white masses whom he thought were destined to flock to the Knights of Nordica. On the contrary he despised and hated them. He had the average Negro’s justifiable fear of the poor whites and only planned to use them as a stepladder to the real money.

Related Characters: Max Disher / Matthew Fisher, Rev. Henry Givens
Related Symbols: The Knights of Nordica
Page Number: 47-48
Explanation and Analysis:

Matthew, who sat on the platform alongside old man Givens viewed the spectacle with amusement mingled with amazement. He was amused because of the similarity of this meeting to the religious orgies of the more ignorant Negroes and amazed that earlier in the evening he should have felt any qualms about lecturing to these folks on anthropology, a subject with which neither he nor his hearers were acquainted. He quickly saw that these people would believe anything that was shouted at them loudly and convincingly enough. He knew what would fetch their applause and bring in their memberships and he intended to repeat it over and over.

Related Characters: Max Disher / Matthew Fisher, Rev. Henry Givens
Related Symbols: The Knights of Nordica
Page Number: 53
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 6 Quotes

The great mass of white workers, however, was afraid to organize and fight for more pay because of a deepset fear that the Negroes would take their jobs. They had heard of black labor taking the work of white labor under the guns of white militia, and they were afraid to risk it. They had first read of the activities of Black-No-More, Incorporated, with a secret feeling akin to relief but after the orators of the Knights of Nordica and the editorials of The Warning began to portray the menace confronting them, they forgot about their economic ills and began to yell for the blood of Dr. Crookman and his associates. Why, they began to argue, one couldn’t tell who was who! Herein lay the fundamental cause of all their ills. Times were hard, they reasoned, because there were so many white Negroes in their midst taking their jobs and undermining their American standard of living. None of them had ever attained an American standard of living to be sure, but that fact never occurred to any of them. So they flocked to the meetings of the Knights of Nordica and night after night sat spellbound while Rev. Givens, who had finished the eighth grade in a one-room country school, explained the laws of heredity and spoke eloquently of the growing danger of black babies.

Related Characters: Max Disher / Matthew Fisher, Rev. Henry Givens
Related Symbols: The Knights of Nordica, Babies
Page Number: 82
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9 Quotes

Rev. Givens, fortified with a slug of corn, advanced nervously to the microphone, fingering his prepared address. He cleared his throat and talked for upwards of an hour during which time he successfully avoided saying anything that was true, the result being that thousands of telegrams and long- distance telephone calls of congratulation came in to the studio. In his long address he discussed the foundations of the Republic, anthropology, psychology, miscegenation, cooperation with Christ, getting right with God, curbing Bolshevism, the bane of birth control, the menace of the Modernists, science versus religion, and many other subjects of which he was totally ignorant. The greater part of his time was taken up in a denunciation of Black-No-More, Incorporated, and calling upon the Republican administration of President Harold Goosie to deport the vicious Negroes at the head of it or imprison them in the federal penitentiary. When he had concluded “In the name of our Savior and Redeemer, Jesus Christ, Amen,” he retired hastily to the washroom to finish his half-pint of corn.

Related Characters: Max Disher / Matthew Fisher, Rev. Henry Givens, Harold Goosie
Related Symbols: The Knights of Nordica
Page Number: 116
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 11 Quotes

“There was so much of this mixing between whites and blacks of the various classes that very early the colonies took steps to put a halt to it. They managed to prevent intermarriage but they couldn’t stop intermixture. You know the old records don’t lie. They’re right there for everybody to see…

“A certain percentage of these Negroes,” continued Buggerie, quite at ease now and seemingly enjoying his dissertation, “in time lightened sufficiently to be able to pass for white. They then merged with the general population. Assuming that there were one thousand such cases fifteen generations ago—and we have proof that there were more—their descendants now number close to fifty million souls. Now I maintain that we dare not risk publishing this information. Too many of our very first families are touched right here in Richmond!

Related Characters: Samuel Buggerie (speaker), Max Disher / Matthew Fisher, Dr. Junius Crookman, Rev. Henry Givens, Arthur Snobbcraft
Page Number: 144
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 12 Quotes

Helen felt a wave of relief go over her. There was no feeling of revulsion at the thought that her husband was a Negro. There once would have been but that was seemingly centuries ago when she had been unaware of her remoter Negro ancestry. She felt proud of her Matthew. She loved him more than ever. They had money and a beautiful, brown baby. What more did they need? To hell with the world! To hell with society! Compared to what she possessed, thought Helen, all talk of race and color was damned foolishness. She would probably have been surprised to learn that countless Americans at that moment were thinking the same thing.

“‘Well,” said Bunny, grinning, “it sure is good to be able to admit that you’re a jigwalk once more.”

“Yes, Bunny,” said old man Givens, “I guess we’re all niggers now.”

Related Characters: Rev. Henry Givens (speaker), Bunny Brown (speaker), Max Disher / Matthew Fisher, Helen Givens/The Blonde Girl, Matthew Fisher Jr.
Page Number: 155
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 13 Quotes

What was the world coming to, if the blacks were whiter than the whites? Many people in the upper class began to look askance at their very pale complexions. If it were true that extreme whiteness was evidence of the possession of Negro blood, of having once been a member of a pariah class, then surely it were well not to be so white!

Related Characters: Dr. Junius Crookman, Rev. Henry Givens, Harold Goosie
Page Number: 178
Explanation and Analysis:

One Sunday morning Surgeon-General Crookman, in looking over the rotogravure section of his favorite newspaper, saw a photograph of a happy crowd of Americans arrayed in the latest abbreviated bathing suits on the sands at Cannes. In the group he recognized Hank Johnson, Chuck Foster, Bunny Brown and his real Negro wife, former Imperial Grand Wizard and Mrs. Givens and Matthew and Helen Fisher. All of them, he noticed, were quite as dusky as little Matthew Crookman Fisher, who played in a sandpile at their feet.

Dr. Crookman smiled wearily and passed the section to his wife.

Related Characters: Max Disher / Matthew Fisher, Dr. Junius Crookman, Rev. Henry Givens, Helen Givens/The Blonde Girl, Bunny Brown, Hank Johnson, Charles “Chuck” Foster, Matthew Fisher Jr., Mrs. Givens
Page Number: 180-181
Explanation and Analysis: