I Hear America Singing And Let America Be America Again

Words: 318
Pages: 2

When you hear “America” you instantly began to think of freedom, patriotic, or even happiness. Two American citizens and well known authors known as Walt Whitman and Langston Hughes are legally born in America. Based on their poems “I Hear America Singing” (Walt Whitman) and “Let America Be America Again” (Langston Hughes) you could either get some similar or different prospects on America from them both.
One trait IHAS (I Hear America Singing) and LABAA (Let America Be America Again) share are their techniques.Their listing of different individuals shows if they’re satisfied or not with what they’re labeled as. Using the same literary device. both authors compare individuals to another object. (“The carpenter singing his, as he measures his plank or beam.” - IHAS) and (“I am the Negro bearing slavery’s scars.” - LABAA)
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Whitman’s main point in his poem was focused on industrial and immigrants due to the time period it was published in, however Hughe’s point was towards civil rights. Quoted from the LABAA, (“Tangled in that that ancient endless chain of profit, power, gain, of grab the land! This quote brought out the tone of LABAA, which was frustrated. The tone of IHAS is patriotic because of the laborers showing appreciation for their professions. Written in unrhymed lines, IHAS is a free verse poem. LABAA was wrote as a rhyming poem because of it’s similar sounds in the poem. Major differences between IHAS and LABAA would be their theme. IHAS’s message was that individual workers and liberty’s make America great. Individuals in LABAA felt excluded from opportunities in