Disillusionment and Distrust: Frederick Douglass's Freedom Journey

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ORIGINAL TITLE In his passage, Frederick Douglass expresses feelings of disappointment and suspiciousness in an attempt to explain the emotions he felt after gaining his freedom. When Douglass decided to escape a life of slavery, he had high expectations for the life of liberty that awaited him. However, the satisfaction diminished quickly, when his past as a slave caught up with him, and began to influence the way that he viewed people and certain situations. Douglass reveals the difficulty he has trusting others in order to emphasize the effects that a life of slavery has subjected on him. He explains how he was constantly surrounded by his “own brethren” yet could not gather the courage to “unfold to any one of them” about what he was going

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