Throughout the novel, the protagonist experiences various internal conflicts because he's torn between following his heart or society, between listening to his family or to Jim, among other struggles. The most important conflict that contributes to the growth of the character is how he learns to act around Jim. While he was still convinced that Jim deserved a different treatment because of his condition of slavery, he also believed deep in his heart that Jim was an honorable person and should be treated like so. Eventually, he does what's right and apologizes to Jim and treats him differently, even when society has convinced him that this is the wrong thing to do.
The author uses imagery by describing the whole experience as bloody and horrifying.
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The author Frederick Douglass brings to light the horrors that slavery entails. In the book, he uses many literary devices to make the reader stand in the same place where the he himself stood. He recounts the time the first time he saw what slavery really was and how a master could exploit his slave.
In the narrative, it was when he saw his aunt getting whipped by Captain Anthony, her master, that he understood what slavery really was. His aunt was getting whipped naked as a punishment to having conversation with a male slave. He described it as 'long series of outrage' as he continued to whip her for prolonged period despite her endless and loud cries and pleas. He described it as 'a blood-stained gate of hell' because of how his aunt was covered in blood because of the merciless whipping. He referred to slavery as hell for the painful and terrifying exhibitions that lied there. He pointed out that the experience and its traumatizing affect was too hard to pen down on a piece of paper.
Answer:
it is D
Explanation:
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