What leads to Douglass’ final decision regarding whether or not to escape? (THE NARRATIVE OF THE LIFE OF FREDERICK DOUGLASS: EXCERPT FROM CHAPTER 11)

A) His master gives up trying to take money from him, so he uses this opportunity to escape.
B) When he begins working in Baltimore, he makes friends that help him travel to freedom.
C) His master lets him work by himself, which enables him to easily escape to freedom without his master noticing.
D) Douglass is late in paying his master, so his master decides not to let him work independently anymore.

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Answer: D

Explanation:

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Frederick Douglass had been an escaping slave who came to fame as both a civil rights activist, author, and orator. Before and during the Civil War, he became a leading abolitionist, which sought to end slavery.

  • His art served as an inspiration to the civil rights movement of the 1960's and beyond.
  • His autobiography was mainly written to persuade the reader that slavery was wrong.
  • To accomplish his goal, he explains the objective world that slaves face as well as his reactions to his experience as a slave.
  • Douglas is liable to repay his master, thus the master decides not to let him work autonomously no longer, resulting in Douglass' ultimate dilemma over whether or not to flee.

Therefore, the final answer is "Option D".

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