The Narrative Of The Life Of Frederick Douglas

Words: 494
Pages: 2

It comes as no surprise to anyone that slavery was a seriously debated issue. However, the founding fathers assumed that slavery would disappear over time. This is because they had prevented the importing of more slaves into the country. The founding fathers also believed that the slave owners would eventually find an alternate solution to use instead of slavery. But, with the invention of the cotton gin and labor demands increasing, the conditions for slaves got worse. Although many people knew that slaves did not have it easy. After reading the Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglas I was shocked by just how badly the slaves were treated. According to the Virginia Quarterly Review, Franklin gave a “vivid depiction of a nightmarish slavery told with an impassioned rhetorician's …show more content…
He wanted everybody to see things from a slave’s point of view and to know that slaves are people too. One thing that shocked me was that before a child had reached its twelfth month “its mother is taken from it” and was sold again to create distance between the child and the mother (Douglass 2172). This shocked me a lot because I feel that every child needs its mother. I could not imagine my life without my mother being in some part of it. I feel that if everybody in the world turned their back on me she would still be there. However, maybe this is why they resold the mother. They did it to break the bond between a mother and child. The child would grow up alone. If the child felt that the world hated it, nobody would still be there for