Frederick Douglass Reflection

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Unlike many of the other slave story’s I have read this story is the most real and heartwarming one I have read. Fredrick was born by his mother and soon separated days after birth. To me this seemed so sad, as a mother your child was going to be gone from you forever. Knowing that you didn’t get to spend time with your child and knowing what their living situation may be as a slave must have been a horrible feeling. Douglas moved to a plantation where he grew up as a child by his master, when soon he was transferred to Baltimore to live with Hugh. Hugh had a wife and her name was Sophia, these two people seemed very loving and caring, because Sophia allowed Douglass to read to her, which I thought this was very thoughtful. Allowing Douglas to do these things allowed him to learn how to read …show more content…
However, the kind-hearted people did not last long. While reading this story their was a time were I finally caught on to what was happening and just had that “oh yeah” moment. It was when Douglas was eventually planning his escape to the North, I realized he would not have been able to do that with out the help of the other people living on the plantation as well as his masters that once treated him well. I think that this just goes to show that the masters were the ones who basically enforced the movement. For Douglass learning how to read and write was learning for him in several ways. For many people first learning how to read and write we find it exciting and maybe soon start writing letters. However, Douglass had a bit different life than all the other normal people in today’s world. Learning how to read and write taught Douglas how to discover what the slave life was like, to know how things were delt. I don’t think this was no kind of proud moment for Douglas at