“DREAMs” by Langston Hughes
Hughes's selection of words and rhetorical devices such as imagery, repetition, and metaphors emphasize the importance of dreams in a person’s life. “Hold fast to dreams” implies an urgency, suggesting that one should hold their dreams tightly and never let them go. Hughes uses imagery when he says “broken-winged bird” as he compares it to a life that’s broken due to letting go dreams which emphasizes the central message “hold fast to dreams”. Hughes describes the downside of a life without dreams by using imagery as when he says “barren field/frozen with snow” to paint a picture of a cold, lonely life. He repeats several words and sentences such as the word “life” that often serves as a reminder that dreams play an important role in a person’s regardless of having them or not having them.
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