Frederick Douglass: My Bondage And My Freedom

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Frederick Douglass is one of the best American writer in the abolitionist movement. He wrote two autobiography which are Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave, Written By Himself and his second one My Bondage and My Freedom which were published in 1845 and the second one in 1855. Frederick was once a slave but at a very young age he understood that his bondages were not of whips and chains but his bondages were that he could not read or write. Frederick would do anything when he was younger to get the knowledge that he wanted. Frederick once said “If there is no struggle there is no progress.” What Frederick is saying is that without working for something you will get nothing in return. I know this because when running for track at the 400 meter and the 800 meter runs, which are the one of the hardest races there are in the world, you do not see progress without feeling the pain of struggle of your body working that hard. With that you do not get better by not working out every single day in some way and you do not get better by pushing yourself harder each day when you do run. When people see the 800 meter …show more content…

What I think of this is that without hardship then nothing would seem better than the other nothing would move forward without this struggle moving it along. Struggling and overcoming that struggle is making progress because you have changed something to make it better and that way you are moving it forward with more struggles to see and some of these struggle cannot be seen. While without progress there would be no better life, no better future the children and no more learning of any of the kind. When struggles makes progress happen and at the same time as the struggling is happening progress is happening you just cannot see it and that’s because you are focused on the struggle that is facing

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