Speech CompositionF. S. Crofts & Company, 1937 - 385 pages |
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Page 107
... conclusion can be read , a conclusion given plausibility by the fact that it is observed as the necessity of a fully realized situation . " 36 Third , the audience is prepared for the conclusion by its own thinking . From the beginning ...
... conclusion can be read , a conclusion given plausibility by the fact that it is observed as the necessity of a fully realized situation . " 36 Third , the audience is prepared for the conclusion by its own thinking . From the beginning ...
Page 108
... conclusion is not the speaker's alone but also theirs . ( B ) Faults . After some years of teaching this method to ... conclusion . Second , too often the situation is not developed so that one and only one conclusion arises out of it ...
... conclusion is not the speaker's alone but also theirs . ( B ) Faults . After some years of teaching this method to ... conclusion . Second , too often the situation is not developed so that one and only one conclusion arises out of it ...
Page 117
... conclusion does violence to every pur- pose and to the very definition of " conclusion , " for , above all things , a conclusion is to conclude and not to argue or to de- velop further . Therefore exclude it . By " new material " is not ...
... conclusion does violence to every pur- pose and to the very definition of " conclusion , " for , above all things , a conclusion is to conclude and not to argue or to de- velop further . Therefore exclude it . By " new material " is not ...
Contents
CHAPTER PAGE | 3 |
THE SPEAKERS PERSONAL PROBLEMS | 9 |
THE SPEECH PURPOSE | 52 |
Copyright | |
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accept action after-dinner speeches American appeal argument arises arouse arrangement attention audi audience Beecher believe Brigance Bryan Chapter conclusion course Daniel O'Connell Daniel Webster desire discussion effective elements emotional eulogy facts feel George William Curtis give Harry Emerson Fosdick hearers Henry Ward Beecher human wants humor idea illustration impelling important influence interest introduction jury kind League of Nations lecture listeners logical main heads means ment mental method mind motives nature never occasion orator periodic sentence persuasion picture Platform Project political campaign speech present principle problem proposition Psychology question Quintilian radio reason response Seminar Project sentence sermon social speaking specific speech situation speeches of courtesy spoken style stereotypes student suggestion Theodore Roosevelt things thought tion topic vivid vote Wendell Phillips whole William Jennings Bryan Woodrow Wilson words write York young speaker