Narrative Of The Life Of Frederick Douglass Language Analysis

500 Words1 Page

The Life of a Slave What is it like to be a slave? In the passage from the novel The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, Douglass uses language to convey to the readers the difficulties of being a slave and how incomparable it is to any other life experience. Douglass’ experience of being a slave and then successfully escaping is an adventure that is impossible to relate to. Douglass uses language choice (sentence structure), imagery, metaphor, and punctuation to express the struggles of being an escaped slave. In the passage, Douglass compares his arrival in New York to that of being a person “who had escaped a den of hungry lions”. This comparison expresses Douglass’ feelings of relief and pride. By using the metaphor of escaping lions, Douglass conveys his gratitude for his survival as a slave. Not only did he flee from the clutches of …show more content…

The indescribable difficulties he faced in New York are impossible for anyone to understand or feel sympathy for, because no one else experienced it. Douglass was living “without home or friends-without money or credit-wanting shelter, and no one to give it- wanting bread, and no money to buy it...pursued by merciless men-hunters...helpless… in the midst of houses, yet having no home..” The use of repetition (sentence structure) of what is desired yet is unattainable indicates how Douglass grappled with having nothing while being surrounded by everything he could ever need. What he could have was just outside of his reach. The punctuation used (the dashes) emphasizes the conclusion of the sentences; how everything is just unobtainable and his wishes are elusive. The imagery of the word “men-hunters” exudes the picture of men hunting men; white men hunting black slaves for money. Because Douglass uses imagery, punctuation, and repetition, his thoughts of escaping life as a slave are clearly depicted as an impossible feat to

Open Document