Langston Hughes uses the metaphor “Or does it explode” to emphasize that when a dream is put off for so long, it will have nowhere to go, and just shatter and break (Hughes 11). The previous comparisons relate the deferred dream to horrible things such as “rotten meat” to reiterate how not achieving your dream leads to disillusionment. The metaphor adds to the effect of a broken dream dying and obliterating everything in its wake. The daunting tone that Hughes uses
Langston Hughes uses the metaphor “Or does it explode” to emphasize that when a dream is put off for so long, it will have nowhere to go, and just shatter and break (Hughes 11). The previous comparisons relate the deferred dream to horrible things such as “rotten meat” to reiterate how not achieving your dream leads to disillusionment. The metaphor adds to the effect of a broken dream dying and obliterating everything in its wake. The daunting tone that Hughes uses