Langston Hughes Similes

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In “Dreams Deferred” by Langston Hughes, multiple similes are used throughout the duration of the poem. Likewise, similes make up the majority of the poem, and are mainly written in the form of a question. The various similes throughout “Dreams Deferred” are all written with the intention of answering the first line of the poem. Hughes uses the numerous similes in his poem to help the reader better grasp the concept of what happens to a dream when it is deferred. Beginning in line two, Langston Hughes writes his first simile. Lines two through three say, "Does it dry up / like a raisin in the sun?" By "it", Hughes is referring to a dream. With that being said, a raisin that dries up becomes useless and valueless. This is much like a

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