Frederick Douglass Rhetorical Analysis

Words: 287
Pages: 2

Despite these exclamations of joy, a feeling of foreboding is present that should be heeded by those who have accomplished the same as Douglas. Indeed this premonition is well founded, being “fugitive[s] … in a strange land - a land” where they were “subjected to the… liability” that they could be “seized upon” by “legalized kidnappers - … [or] his fellowmen”(Douglas 19). With multiple hyphens used, Douglas makes further comparison of their fragile position in society. Greatly lengthening the sentence, they provide a contrast of those preceding this one because of this sentence’s purpose: a warning. Furthermore, Douglas followed his own council and “‘Trust no man!’” became his “motto,” and “every white man” had the possibility of being his