English, asked by rmshbrm3, 7 months ago

Discuss the significance of the river imagery in the poem, The Negro speaks of Rivers by Langston Hughes​

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Answered by darshmenon05
3

Answer:

Explanation:

In “The Negro Speaks of Rivers”, the river stands as a symbol of endlessness, geographical awareness, and the epitome of the human soul.  Hughes uses the literary elements of repetition and simile to paint the river as a symbol of timelessness.  This is evident in the first two lines of the poem.  Hughes introduces this timeless symbol, stating, “I've known rivers: I've known rivers ancient as the world and older than the flow of human blood in human veins” (Hughes 1-2). These opening lines of the poem identifies that the rivers Hughes is speaking about are older than the existence of human life. This indicates the rivers’ qualities of knowledge, permanence, and the ability to endure all.  Humans associate “age” with these traits and the longevity of a river makes it a force to be reckoned with. The use of a simile in the line of the poem is to prompt the audience that this is truly a contrast between that ancient wisdom, strength, and determination of the river and the same qualities that characterize a human being. The imagery portrayed in the poem of blood flowing through human veins like a river flows

Answered by reetadevi9873430570
1

Answer:

Examples are Litmus, Turmeric, China rose petals, snowball plant, Red Cabbage and Grape Juice. Original colour of litmus paper is purple dye in colour which is execrated from lichen (plant belonging to the division of Thallophyta)and commonly use as indicator

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