![]() ![]() ![]() Oroonoko then replied he was very sorry to hear that the captain pretended to the knowledge and worship of any gods, who had taught him no better principles than not to credit, as he would be credited. This was delivered to the still doubting captain, who could not resolve to trust a heathen, he said, upon his parole, a man that had no sense or notion of the God that he worshiped. This explication paper looks into the hero that Oroonoko was and the knowledge of slave masters that slavery was utterly wrong. Greater part of this novel does not give a direct meaning and the reader has to have a keen eye to understand what the writer meant. Behn employs literature widely by use of literal elements like symbolism, metaphor, tone and personification among others. Oroonoko, written by Aphra Behn, is a story dealing mainly with slavery traversing from Africa to Europe where slave trade dominated. ![]()
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