No matter how vigorously one tries in their place of work, they, along with their peers, will all end up in the same place. This was the brutal truth Douglass’s grandmother, a slave, had to come to terms with when she was hurled into the woods where she was overtaken by loneliness and had suffered a prolonged death. Sadly, this was the case even after having taken substantial care for her slaveholder from his birth to his demise. Merriam Webster defines dedication as; self sacrificing, dedication, and loyalty; his grandmother was described as devoted to her work, and an overall warm hearted individual. The presumption that a person that differs from ourself is wicked and morally wrong, when it comes to Frederick Douglass, his message of parity among all races distinguishes him from slaves …show more content…
Frederick Douglass whimsically implies his message of how the treatment of slaves was unforgiving, no matter how hard they worked, in the end they were still slaves, through the implication of rhetorical devices such as anecdotes to provide a better ethos, harsh diction portraying his hatred for slaveholders, and anaphora to