There is less use of expressives which sum up to 3 out of 72 sentences representing 4.1%. Directives constituted 16 sentences or 22.2% and declaratives, 15 sentences or 20.8% while commisives made up 8 sentences accounting for 11.1%. There are excessive use of representatives (43%) and simple sentences (40.3%). Adopting a pragmastatistic approach, the authors reveal the speaker’s use of the five illocutionary acts and five major structural sentence sub-types, all of which point to the future state of the American people, including African-Americans. The authors attempt an introspective probe into the far-reaching outcome of the speech made some six decades ago. The pragmatic analysis adopted in this paper anchors on the illocutionary force of the speech acts theory, following the five classifications by Seale (1975), with the aim of identifying the speech acts and the sentence structures found in the speech. The speech is about the failed promises by the Americans whose dream advocate equality for all. This speech is selected for use because it involves a speaker and an audience who belong to a particular speech community. This paper investigates the speech of Martin Luther King (Jr.) titled: “I Have a Dream”, presented in 1963 at the Lincoln Memorial.
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