Frederick Douglass Sensory Analysis

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In the Douglass essay, there were many sensory details in his writings that made his situation seem immediate to me. For instance, the entry starts off with Douglass introducing his mistress when he first went to live with her, as “a kind and tender- hearted woman,” who would “give bread to the hungry, clothes to the naked, and comfort for every mourner she encountered.” As I read these words, he has a way of planting visions in my mind, that I am the one on the street watching her perform these good deeds.
Douglass then goes on to describe how slavery and his mistress husband’s beliefs alter her demeanor, for example, he writes about her “tender heart became stone, and the lamblike disposition gave way to one of tiger-like fierceness.” He

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