Frederick Douglass Chapter 6 Summary

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In chapter six of Frederick Douglass, Douglass emphasises the importance in the reputation of a clean city. In this chapter, Douglass mentions that in this new setting, his lifestyle is completely altered; Douglass discusses that as a reward he receives a new pair of trousers, in comparison to Douglass’s life in the plantation where his wardrobe consisted of "coarse tow linen shirt" that reached to his knees. Douglass affirms, “A city slave is almost a freeman, compared with a slave on the plantation" (Douglass 50). When look at the context of the trouser, they symbolically represents a step toward a more civilized state for Douglass, in comparison to the disheveled environment Douglass previously lived at. And when analyzing the context of

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