Use of Dreams in Hughes's Poetry: Les Rêves Dans La Poésie de Hughes
Use of Dreams in Hughes's Poetry: Les Rêves Dans La Poésie de Hughes
Use of Dreams in Hughes's Poetry: Les Rêves Dans La Poésie de Hughes
1. INTRODUCTION
Throughout his career, Langton Hughes spoke of
dreams. Without a doubt, Langton Hughes saw value in
the image of the dream. In the poetry of Langton
Hughes, the dream is one of the most frequently
discussed concepts. To some extent, we can say that
Langston Hughes was obsessed with dreams. One early
and dearly loved poem urges listeners to hold fast to
dreams. Two of his books of poetry incorporated the
word dream in their titles. His 1932 book aimed at
young readers was The Dream Keeper, and his highly
celebrated 1951 jazz volume was Montage of a Dream
Deferred. Of the 879 poems in The Collected Poems of
Langston Hughes, seventy-four make explicit reference
to dreams. A number of the poem titles play with a
variation on the word dream, such as Dream,
Dream Variations, Dream Boogie, Dream Boogie:
Variation, The Dream Keeper, Dream of
Freedom, I Dream a World, and Montage of a
Dream Deferred. In this article, we would like to
analyze the significance of dreams and different
categories of dreams of Langton Hughes.
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3. SUMMARY
In Hughess dream poems, we can find pragmatic
dreams expressed in Montage of a Dream Deferred,
such as a whit enamel stove or two new suits at
once., his thinkings about African Americans use of
predictive dreams, his voice for racial equality, and
finally his utopian and global dreams that urge and
inspire others who share these vast dreams to unite and
determine to achieve these new worlds being dreamed.
What is worthy mentioning is that for Hughes in the
1960s, the dreams that occupied his poems reflected the
needs, the hopes, and the aspirations of a community far
more global and utopian than the residents of Harlem,
New York, who had been the subjects of Montage of a
Dream Deferred. Moreover, the dreams he wrote about
were more than fantasies, more than imagination. These
dreams were in fact vision of the future. These were not
things that could perhaps be deferred. Instead, these
dreams of which Hughes wrote in the closing years of
his life were important aspirations. Forty years after his
death, we may evaluate the world and the dreams of
which Hughes spoke. Did his readers heed his call?
Were the dreams realized? And if we see things that still
need to be done, we must uplift the banner implanted in
Hughes poetry. We must rally other dreamers around
the world to join together to see that our world becomes
the place Hughes dreamed about.
REFERENCES
Hughes, Langton. Collected poem[M]. New York: Random House, 1959.
Hughes, Langton. Ask Your Mama:12 Moods for Jazz. New York: Random House. 1961.
THE AUTHOR
Xu Wei, lecturer at the School of Foreign Languages, Huangshi Institute of Technology,Hubei, 430000, China.
E-mail: dylanandchloe@163.com
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