Answer:
C. African Americans were performing the same duties as others without the same rights.
Explanation:
"What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?" is the famous speech given by a former slave Frederick Douglass delivered right after the July 4th celebration in 1852. He was addressing the Rochester Ladies' Anti-slavery Society.
In the speech, he talks of the trials and recurring problems that the slaves and in general blacks are still going through. Even though America had got its independence long back, the status and condition of the slaves still remained the same.
In the excerpt, he stressed the way all the blacks had to do all kinds of work but still have to prove their worth as men. While the whites had enjoyed the nation's independence with every type of freedom, the blacks still had to undergo various prejudice and tribulations just to be accepted as a citizen of the same nation. Living in the same nation and under same government doesn't guarantee them the same level of freedom. They still are treated with contempt and with regulations. Though performing the same efforts and duties, they don't enjoy the same rights.