Analysis of Martin Luther King’s Dream For America

Karl Constantine FOLKES 1935 (Portland)

Ode


Meandering through the passage of time,
A prophet and seer among us.
Resilient in the quest to find peace;
To broken souls, bring them healing.
Intransigent goal to elevate those
Needing their spirits uplifted.

Leaving none out — including all instead.
Ushering new promise of hope.
Telling a nation freedom is for all:
Her sundry colorful people.
Equality has no bias at all.
Requires Justice — With Wisdom.

King, our teacher, a wise prophet and seer,
Inviting all to join his dream:
Nearer all to get to the mountain top;
Gathering the nation’s children.

Joining hands, black and white; yellow and brown,
Remembering that dream of his.


Scheme XXXXXX XXAXAX XXXX XX
Poetic Form
Metre 0100101011 01001011 010001111 11011110 010011101 10110100 1011010101 10011011 1001010111 01010010 0100111011 01010110 11010011001 01011111 1011110101 10001010 1011011001 01001111
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 646
Words 126
Sentences 10
Stanzas 4
Stanza Lengths 6, 6, 4, 2
Lines Amount 18
Letters per line (avg) 28
Words per line (avg) 6
Letters per stanza (avg) 127
Words per stanza (avg) 27

About this poem

Dr. Martin Luther King, Prophet, Healer, and Seer: This poem was composed as an acrostic ode to honor the life and legacy of the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. (1929-1968), America’s civil rights leader and national hero. The poem is composed with four unrhymed stanzas, the first two stanzas composed with six lines each; the third with four lines; and the last or fourth stanza consisting of two lines. The entire poem is written with a consistent alternating pattern of a 10-8 measure, the first line of the first stanza consisting of 10 beats, and the last line of the last two-line stanza consisting of eight beats. Altogether, the four-stanza acrostic poem begins stylistically with a 10-beat measure, and concludes with an eight-beat measure. POSTSCRIPT: I had the privilege, if ever so briefly, of meeting, greeting, and shaking hands with the civil rights icon, the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King when, in 1964, he visited the New York publishing house of Educational Heritage, Incorporated (known also then as Negro Heritage Library), located at 733 Yonkers Avenue, Yonkers, New York), that prepared and edited the manuscripts of Dr. Martin Luther King, and those of other prominent world-wide writers, journalists, and poets of African-American descent, living or deceased. During that period of time, I was hired as a proofreader under the tutelage of other civil rights foot soldiers and ground workers at the publishing house that was administered by the Reverend Dr. Wyatt T. Walker, Vice President of the publishing house, the lead pastor of Harlem’s First Ebenezer Baptist Church, and a close colleague of Dr. King’s during the height of the civil rights struggles in the south, in Montgomery, Alabama. See my earlier written poem, “King, The Icon,” published online on poetry.com on December 18, 2021, that refers briefly to my historic encounter with Dr. Martin Luther King. POSTSCRIPT: “Justice With Wisdom is Justice With Love.” ❤️ 

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Written on January 11, 2023

Submitted by karlcfolkes on January 11, 2023

Modified by karlcfolkes on January 18, 2023

37 sec read
405

Karl Constantine FOLKES

Retired educator of Jamaican ancestry with a lifelong interest in composing poetry dealing particularly with the metaphysics of self-reflection; completed a dissertation in Children’s Literature in 1991 at New York University entitled: An Analysis of Wilhelm Grimm’s ‘Liebe Mili’ (translated into English as “Dear Mili”), Employing Von Franzian Methodological Processes of Analytical Psychology. The subject of the dissertation concerned the process of Individuation. more…

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    "Martin Luther King’s Dream For America" Poetry.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 17 May 2024. <https://www.poetry.com/poem-analysis/148535/martin-luther-king%E2%80%99s-dream-for-america>.

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