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Caleb's Rhetorical Analysis Of Frederick Douglass

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Caleb’s Rhetorical Analysis From a very young age as a slave, all Frederick Douglass could dream and look forward to was the day he became a free man. After being betrayed and caught the day he and his friends were planning to escape and later successfully escaping to the North, he is assaulted by a barrage of unexpected emotions considering he has just accomplished his life dream. In Douglass’ poignant piece, he expresses that first high excitement then extreme insecurity through powerful analogies, connotative diction to convey the immense emotional distress of his loneliness, and irony using strong parallelism to present the controversy that came with living in a new place with no friends or family, only enemies. Douglass’ powerful emotional
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