Langston Hughes's "Dreams Deferred" and "Dreams" poems "Dreams Deferred" and "Dreams" talk about the importance of dreams. The author uses different types of figurative languages, such as similar words and metaphors, to show how they are similar and different. In the poem "dream", the author wrote as follows: "I claim your dream / if you see a dream of death" (Hughes 1-2 verse 1). The theme of this verse is not to make them die but to make your dreams come true.
The image of Harlem of Langston Hughes "What will happen if my dream is behind" is the first line about the harem in the early 1950s. Very interesting social explanation. It talks about Harlem, "Dream of Delay", a safe shelter for literature and wisdom from the late 1930s to the early 1930s, but it slowly disappeared into the shadow of its existence. Langston Hughes's "Harlem" is full of very vivid images. Langston Hughes's "Harlem" uses examples of various images that can be associated with it.
Langston Hughes experienced a tremendous decade from the 1920s to the 1960s, many blacks experienced difficulties and found comfort in their dreams. People living in the harem colony will have particularly good places for them, their families and their future dreams. Langston Hughes discussed Harlem 's dream of one of his poems and what they could do. Hughes began saying "What happened to the delay of dream ...". Hughes is asking what happens to his dream. Langston Hughes has a challenging career in race and life. There is a correlation between what is believed to be the cause of discrimination in his sentence style and the uneasy topic. His writings can be said to bring hope to African Americans, but his style may be horrible and distracting when he spends time reading his work. They may not look real, but they are the way he explains and tells what the future African-Americans have to experience like him and what they have.