However, King does not stop there: "We can never be satisfied" he reiterated four times in the same way convincing his group of spectators that they will not be satisfied until "the own capital will not go down." like waters, and exemplary nature like an unrelenting stream." The most widely cited sample of anaphora in King's speech is found in the oft-quoted expression "I have a fantasy," which is repeated eight times as King paints a picture of a 'America incorporated and bound together for its audience. From this use of anaphora the very title of this speech was taken. "So, despite the fact that we face the problems of today and tomorrow, regardless I have an imagination. It is a fantasy deeply rooted in the American dream" and for the few lines that accompany it, "I have a fantasy" in quality and emphasis give its group of people the confidence that one day, soon, they too would be treated as equivalent and they would walk as one with each of each shade. Martin Luther King Jr. infers that his fantasy is none other than the fantasy of the Founding Fathers which he references a few times in his speech. Plus, closing with another poignant anaphora,
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