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Fredrick Douglass: The Power Of Literacy

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The power of literacy is not the ability to read and wright or to have good penmanship but rather than an individual’s capacity to combines those skills and express one’s thoughts and feelings and comprehend the same from others. An individual’s capacity of combining these skills and using them to trudge a course for his or her own life is where the power of literacy lies. In the Narrative of the life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave, Mr. Auld warned Mrs. Auld that if you give a nigger an inch he would take an ell (Douglass 1845) and Fredric Douglass did just that. Literacy is the key that unlocks one’s ability to increase learning process. Fredrick Douglass is prof of this and should serve as an inspiration to others to learn how to read and wright and or to enhance their literary skills. As I will describe in this paper the power to read and wright can be life changing. …show more content…

It allows one to think in new ways and expands the horizons of ones dreams. It helps build a strong foundation for success in life. Fredrick Douglass would sometimes say to his white friends, “I wished I could be as free as you will be when you are men. “You will be free as soon as you are twenty-one, but I am a slave for life! (Douglass, 1845). These thoughts of being a slave for life were short lived soon after Douglass learned to read. Fredrick Douglass began to read a book titled “the Columbian Orator” this book contained a dialogue between a master and his slave. In the dialogue, the salve said some very smart things that lead to the voluntary emancipation of the slave on part of the master. In the same book he read a speech on and behalf of Catholic emancipation. The dialogue and the speech gave Fredrick Douglass both the knowledge and courage to challenge the morality and existence of

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