Answer: The Heart of a Woman, by Georgia Douglas Johnson (1918)
Explanation:
Along with other Harlem Renaissance poets, like Langston Hughes and Claude McKay, Georgia Douglas Johnson showed that longing for freedom is a key element of their identity. In the poem "The Heart of a Woman", Georgia reflects the experience of being an African American woman, and the pain that experience brings. Women enter "some alien cage in its plight, And tries to forget it has dreamed of the stars", she writes, reflecting the subjugation that her community, especially women, experienced.