Martin's Letter

615 Words2 Pages

One day, in a building of concrete and bars, a pen met paper in hope that a change would be made. A letter was scribed; then placed in an envelope addressed to clergymen. Martin Luther King’s letter was written in 1963 from the Birmingham City Jail. He was in jail because he didn’t have a permit to parade—but he was doing more than parading. He was taking a stand for equality for the African-American community. Some clergymen of Birmingham accused King of unwise and untimely actions, but Martin Luther thought these men’s opinion might have been misled. King uses figurative language and conative word choice to influence his readers; so the clergymen would see the importance of the African-American community sharing equality with the white community and how they needed to act now. Primarily King wanted to melt the hearts of stone that enslaved the African-American’s. In paragraph seven, King says; I had hoped that the white moderate would understand that law and order exists for the purpose of establishing justice, and that when they fail to do this they become dangerously structur...

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