preview

Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass Essay

Decent Essays

Frederick Augustus Washington Bailey (later known as Frederick Douglass) was born a slave in Talbot County, Maryland around the year 1818. He was an African American reformer, writer, and orator. Douglass was one of the few noteworthy heroes who arose from the evils of slavery and impacted the United States and the world in significant ways. After escaping from slavery, he became known for his astounding oratory skills and remarkable antislavery writing. He became an important leader of the abolitionist movement. Northerners found it hard to believe that such an incredible orator had once been a slave. To verify this, Douglass described the events of his life as a slave and his ambition to be a free man in Narrative of the Life of …show more content…

In his narrative, Douglass highly criticizes the hypocritical slave owners who claim to be Christians. He believes a man cannot be both a Christian and a slave owner. He states that religious slave owners are harsher than the ones who aren’t religious. Thomas Auld’s brutality increases after he becomes a “religious” man. His dedication increases his confidence in his “God-given” right to own and abuse slaves. Douglass clarifies in the appendix of the narrative that he was against religious hypocrisy, and not religion itself, for Douglass himself was a very religious man.
As a slave, Douglass recognized literacy as an important attribute of a free man. Although his teaching sessions with Sophia Auld had concluded, the little that he learned from her served as the foundation for his future literacy. While living with the Aulds in Baltimore, Douglass encountered whites against slavery for the first time in his life. As a child, he would sometimes bribe poor white boys into teaching him how to read and write in exchange for bread. At age twelve, he obtained a copy of the Columbian Orator, a collection of political essays, poems, and dialogues used in American schools to teach reading, writing, and speaking, which formed the root for his later talents as a public lecturer. Once taken back to his original Maryland plantation, he risked severe punishment and began to assist his fellow slaves to read by operating an

Get Access