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English, 17.01.2020 00:31 Qpaoswp34

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read the passages. now jim was a dreamer, but he was a thinker, too. and he thought one day that if he let his owner meet the cooter, he might get his freedom that way. after all, a talkin cooter was a wonderful thing to hear. so jim went on back to the plantation. he found the slaveowner, and he says, “mas, i wanter tell you about this cooter down there at the pond.” i ran away from the plantation and all who i knew there. i lived in the fields and in the woods. even in caves. sometimes i slept up in the tree branches. or in a hay pile. i couldn’t get across the river now, it was watched so closely. finally, i did get across. late one night me and my wife went. i had gone back to the plantation to get her. mr. rankins had him a bell by this time, along with the light. we were rowin and rowin. we could see the light and hear that bell, but it seemed we weren't getting any closer. it took forever, it seemed. that was because we were so scared and it was so dark and we knew we could get caught and never get gone. —“carrying the running-aways,” virginia hamiltonread the passages. then, write two to three sentences comparing jim’s viewpoint on escaping from slavery with the nonfiction narrator’s viewpoint on escaping from slavery.

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read the passages. now jim was a dreamer, but he was a thinker, too. and he thought one da...

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