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  1. Alliteration: When two or more nearby words or syllables repeat the same beginning consonant sound, it is known as alliteration. For example “stifled sobs” and “deep despair”. Hyperbole: Exaggeration used as a figure of speech or rhetorical technique is known as hyperbole. For example, “Whose stifleRead more

    1. Alliteration: When two or more nearby words or syllables repeat the same beginning consonant sound, it is known as alliteration. For example “stifled sobs” and “deep despair”.
    2. Hyperbole: Exaggeration used as a figure of speech or rhetorical technique is known as hyperbole. For example, “Whose stifled sobs of deep despair” and “With anguish none may paint or tell” emphasize the suffering of the blacks.
    3. Anaphora: A rhetorical device known as an anaphora occurs when a word or term is repeated at the start of several sentences, clauses, or phrases. “And mothers stood, with streaming eyes,/ And saw their dearest children sold”
    4. Metaphor: The use of a term or phrase that refers to one type of thing or concept in place of another to imply a similarity or connection between them is known as a metaphor. For example, in the line “While tyrants bartered them for gold,” “tyrant” is a metaphor for a slaver. 

     

    The Slave Auction Summary

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  1. Frances Harper's poem "The Slave Auction" recounts a slave auction scene in which women lose their loved ones, as well as the speaker's awareness after seeing the spectacle. It illustrates what it's like to be surrounded by black women, some of whose husbands and children were being sold there, as wRead more

    Frances Harper’s poem “The Slave Auction” recounts a slave auction scene in which women lose their loved ones, as well as the speaker’s awareness after seeing the spectacle. It illustrates what it’s like to be surrounded by black women, some of whose husbands and children were being sold there, as well as young ladies who were ashamed and upset about what was going on. Although some black women were crying over the loss of their husbands, others were suffering from the sorrow of watching their children being traded for little more than “gold.” Nobody can truly understand someone else’s suffering unless they are experiencing it themselves, says Harper.

     

    The Slave Auction Summary

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  1. The themes of love and loss, slavery, and the agony of losing a loved one are all present in Harper’s poem “The Slave Auction”. The Slave Auction Summary

    The themes of love and loss, slavery, and the agony of losing a loved one are all present in Harper’s poem “The Slave Auction”.

    The Slave Auction Summary

    See less