Langston Hughes Literary Devices

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The loss of a significant other has to be one of the most traumatic experiences of a lifetime. As time passes, the loss may appear to the outside world to be minimized in the mind of the surviving spouse but often the appearance is misleading. The feeling of loss, never leaves, as there The use of free verse allows the speaker to express deep emotions and feelings, without restriction of form. There is no strict meter in this short poem of ten lines. The poem does not contain any rhyme. The poem has 4 syllables in the first line of the poem and 23 syllables in the second line followed by 8 syllables in the third line. Hughes uses concrete imagery to display the progression of events in the life of the native African from birth (line 2, 4-5). The author provides an image of a …show more content…

The South did not want to end slavery, darkness entered, "muddy bosom." The word muddy is an adjective for "not clear, not pure". The word "bosom" is a noun meaning breast or the center of feelings or emotions. [Paraphrased: The call to freedom was hindered by a constitutional proclamation that was presented in the midst of upheaval and corruption]. The phrase "turn all golden" means the future was looking brighter. The sunset, a metaphor for freedom, denotes the end of that period. [Paraphrased: I heard the call of freedom ....and the deeply centered feelings of all that it stood for (emancipation proclamation - 1863) turn dark as emotions ran high (civil war - 1865) but in the end, freedom was achieved ("all golden in the sunset")]. The speaker's tone is formal and passionate in an emotional recounting of African American

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