Similes In Harlem By Langston Hughes

236 Words1 Page

Throughout Langston Hughes poem Harlem he used heavy imagery to convey his central idea. In this poem Hughes is discussing the circumstances that could happen if you were to defer a dream. He uses a variety of similes in order to get his point across to his readers. In the first two lines he asks “Does it dry up -- like a raisin in the sun?” By saying this it makes the readers think about a dried up raisin that is no longer good, helping convey the fact that if you were to hold off on your dreams they might die as quickly as a raisin would dry up if it were in the sun. If the dream was used while it was fresh it would still be usable. “Does it stink like rotten meat?” makes the reader understand that eventually your dream could rot and could

Open Document