In his writings, Douglass uses vivid imagery to convey the suffering and endurance of his grandmother. For example, he describes her as a "wrinkled and aged woman, who seemed deserted by every one but her faithful grandson". This image of her abandoned and aged captures the loneliness and neglect she endured. Additionally, Douglass paints a haunting picture of her "trembling with age, and standing in the stormy winds and pitiless pelting of the northern blast." This imagery evokes a sense of vulnerability and resilience in her struggle against the harsh elements of nature.
she died
Did not want him to read
by his Grandmother he called Grandmama Betsey Baily
His grandmother raised him until age 6.
anaphora
Frederick Douglass was born into slavery. He was torn from his mother and grandmother. He went on to help the country by stopping segregation and slavery.
Because his grandmother lived far away
Because his grandmother lived far away
Because his grandmother lived far away
white because it meant freedom
some examples would include how he constantly refers to his grandmother as a symbol for how cruelty runs the world (at the time) and how that can be put together to create an emotional appeal in getting the author to open up a sympathetic vantage into the argument of Douglass.
Rosetta Douglass, Lewis Henry Douglass, Frederick Douglass, Jr., Charles Remond Douglass, and Annie Douglass.