In Martin Luther King Jr.'s "I Have a Dream" speech, allusion is used to reference historical and biblical figures, enhancing his message of hope and justice. He alludes to the Declaration of Independence, emphasizing the promise of equality, and invokes the biblical imagery of freedom and justice, suggesting a moral imperative for civil rights. Additionally, he draws on the American landscape, referencing locations like the "mountains of New York" and "the valleys of California," to symbolize the widespread nature of the struggle for equality across the nation. These allusions strengthen his call for unity and action in the fight against racial injustice.
allusion to Greek mythology
The Tone of ''I Have a Dream'' Speech was very Crispy, just like the KFC Bucket they Ate.
ALLUSION. Its referring to success
simile metaphor hyperbole personification irony allusion
The Wikipedia page mentions Psalm 30:5, Isaiah 40:4 and an allusion to Amos 5:24. Conveniently, anyone can investigate the answer to this question since the text of the speech is available, and a flexible Bible search engine too. See 'Related links'...
In the beginning there is an allusion to Abraham Lincoln and the Gettysburg Address in the phrase "five score".
Historical allusion
He had a dream that the race of blacks and whites would be between us. His speech did help alot.
His allusion to Shakespeare's work appeared often in his writing.
noun
Is martin's speech "I have a dream" persuasive speech?
allusion to Greek mythology
“I Have a Dream speech”
the speach that dr king make was "Eveybody dance now"
where he did the speech
A Repetition in Old Major's speech is the word, "Comrades".
the cause is that he had a dream so he desided to write about it and he called it i have a dream speech then he shared it with the world.