There is an archaic term "Exeunt" used to describe a situation where many characters leave the stage. "Exeunt Omnes" would be the stage direction for everyone to leave.
The speaker's intent in this excerpt from the speech is most likely to criticize the white population for celebrating liberty while enforcing slavery on the black population (B).
Frederick Douglass gave this speech in Rochester, New York on July 4th, 1852.
In the text, Douglass denounces the irony which results from asking him, a black former slave, to speak on a holiday which is meant to represent liberty for Americans. Indeed, while they cheer and celebrate, their slaves can only dream of freedom: "above your ... tumultuous joy, I hear the mournful wail of millions, whose chains ... are today rendered more intolerable by the jubilant shouts that reach them." Douglass is saying America is "false to the present" if it thinks of itself as a nation of liberty, because it is ignoring the people who cannot take part in this liberty.
A comma
Can be used to combine two independent clauses correctly
Answer:
I would probably have to disagree because we learn from what happened yesterday, and we will continue to grow tomorrow. We should of course stay in the present and be mindful but it doesn't mean it is more important. They are all equal imo. We learn from our mistakes, even if it is just from yesterday, and if we already made them today, then tomorrow will be an opportunity to start afresh. I don't know this is probably wrong :(