Poem found here: "Harlem [Dream Deferred]" by Langston Hughes So the version I have of this poem spoils the powerful opening line, "What happens to a dream deferred?" when, I think it shouldn't. The poem should start out as "Harlem" which is more an over-encompassing with then the first line asking a very sharp and personal question to the community and the self. What happens when dreams are put on the side? I mean people shift their dreams for multiple reasons, but this isn't a poem about that; rather, harshly, the dream is already deferred, so what happens, "Does it dry up / like a raising in the sun?" Exists but deflated, "Or fester like a sore-- / And the run?" The metaphor with this line goes in different direction. To fester implies to stay in one place and decay, while running means either to let it keep going or to get away. In this case the ambiguous metaphor is searching for something. "Or crust and sugar o...
Formerly the RetailMFA, This is the Poetry Blog of Darrell Dela Cruz