Relationship Between Frederick Douglass And The Slaveholders

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Pages: 2

Douglass is very convincing in his story that Slaveholders think about slavery negatively. The slaves are very unhappy with slaves and the slaveholders are also thinking that it is negative. The slaves sang spirituals to help them get over the slavery and the hate. Frederick Douglass uses great imagery and sense for how the slaveholders treat them. “The heavy cowskin upon her naked shoulders causing the warm red blood to drip” (Douglass).

“The slaves sing songs that are very Pathetic, Have deep sadness, Raptureless” (Douglass). The slaves sing about going to see god or going to heaven which shows how sad they are and how much negativity they felt. When the slaves still sing that they want to go to heaven and to die just to end their lives, it really puts us into the perspective that they are really bummed about slavery and it gets them down. The slaveholders are also affected by
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He does a good job of describing what he saw very descriptively. He can really put imagery into his stories and shows what happened and how horrible they treat them. The slaveholders knew that what they were doing was thought wrong in different places but they didn’t care and that shows how cruel they are. They harshly beat their slaves to death to the point where they just buy new ones as if they were a pair of shoes or something.

Overall though Frederick Douglass does a really good job of telling his experiences into a story. Showing how negative slavery was not only on the slaves but on the slaveholders as well. He describes the beatings as “harsh, whipping sounds through the air” (Douglass). He describes them as painful and full of hate and passion in what they are doing to the innocent people. The Narrative of his experiences were really eye opening in what all happened, and how slavery affected everybody negatively not just slaves but slaveholders and normal