Question 126·Hard·Command of Evidence
In his 1854 speech Slavery and the American Crisis, Frederick Douglass contends that moral appeals alone cannot end slavery; instead, he insists that enslaved and free Black Americans must pursue direct political involvement, as is evident when he ______
Which choice most effectively uses a quotation from Douglass’s speech to illustrate this claim?
For quotation-evidence questions, reduce the claim to a checklist of required ideas. Here, the claim has two parts: (1) moral appeals alone are not enough and (2) the solution is direct political involvement. Choose the quote that explicitly matches the most specific requirement (political participation—e.g., voting), and treat quotes that only match the general theme (injustice, suffering, hope, repentance, or even “Congress should act”) as tempting but incomplete.
Hints
Clarify the claim in the question
Restate the claim: Douglass says moral appeals by themselves won’t end slavery, so Black Americans must take direct political action. What would that look like in a quote?
Look for explicit political participation
Prefer wording tied to participating in government (for example, voting/elections), not just condemning slavery or hoping for change.
Watch for partial matches
Some quotes may agree that “moral suasion” isn’t enough or may mention Congress/laws, but ask whether they actually show Black Americans engaging politically themselves.
Step-by-step Explanation
Understand what the question is asking
The stem says Douglass believes moral appeals alone won’t end slavery and that enslaved and free Black Americans must pursue direct political involvement. You need the quotation that best illustrates that specific shift toward political action.
Identify the key evidence to look for
A strong match should do more than condemn slavery or describe suffering. It should point to concrete political participation (for example, voting, elections, or using formal civic power).
Eliminate choices that don’t show Black Americans’ direct political participation
- One option rejects “moral suasion alone,” which matches part of the claim (moral appeals aren’t enough), but it doesn’t clearly show the alternative: direct political involvement.
- Another option calls for repentance and sympathy, which is still primarily a moral/emotional appeal rather than a concrete political action.
- Another option mentions Congress changing laws, but it frames action as something Congress should do rather than showing Black Americans themselves engaging directly in the political process.
After eliminating those, choose the remaining quotation—the one that directly points to participating in elections/civic power.
Select the quote that most directly shows political participation
Because only one option explicitly frames voting and entering the electoral system as the route to liberty, the best support is “declares, ‘the ballot box is the citadel of our liberties, and I mean to seek entrance.’”