"I have a fantasy that one day the country will ascend and experience the genuine significance of its creed¡K that all men are made equivalent." For the following few lines of his discourse he rehashed these words, "I have a fantasy," which stimulated feeling in his group of onlookers and give them trust. This trust was that they would one day be dealt with as equivalents and walk next to each other with the every single other race. Lord utilizes his the expression "I have a fantasy today," twice as its own section. This announcement was likely talked with extraordinary accentuation since it gave the audience members the craving to change "today" rather than keeping on being victimized. Martin Luther King's discourse could have exceptionally well been titled something else but since of his utilization of anaphora which firmly underscored these words it earned itself the title "I Have a