Speech CompositionAppleton-Century-Crofts, 1953 - 385 pages |
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Page 71
... tell you what I thought . I thought simply this - " I am glad of it . " ( Laughter . ) Why ? Because if they had felt per- fectly secure , that you are the minions of the South and the slaves of slavery , they would have been perfectly ...
... tell you what I thought . I thought simply this - " I am glad of it . " ( Laughter . ) Why ? Because if they had felt per- fectly secure , that you are the minions of the South and the slaves of slavery , they would have been perfectly ...
Page 159
... tell you that which you yourselves do know ; Show you sweet Cæsar's wounds , poor poor dumb mouths , And bid them speak for me : ( 3 ) Repetition . The advertiser keeps the name of his product constantly before our attention . The ...
... tell you that which you yourselves do know ; Show you sweet Cæsar's wounds , poor poor dumb mouths , And bid them speak for me : ( 3 ) Repetition . The advertiser keeps the name of his product constantly before our attention . The ...
Page 208
... tell what we shall see there ; it merely says , " This is the way , " and as- sures us that we are on the right road . So may a speaker re- assure his audience . Let us take an illustration from Theodore Roosevelt's speech of dedication ...
... tell what we shall see there ; it merely says , " This is the way , " and as- sures us that we are on the right road . So may a speaker re- assure his audience . Let us take an illustration from Theodore Roosevelt's speech of dedication ...
Contents
THE SEVEN Lamps OF SPEECH Development | 3 |
THE SPEAKERS PERSONAL PROBLEMS | 9 |
THE SPEECH PURPOSE | 32 |
Copyright | |
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accept action Æsop American appeal argument arouse arrangement attention audi audience Beecher believe Chapter conclusion course Daniel O'Connell Daniel Webster desire discussion effective elements emotional ence eulogy facts feel Franklin D George William Curtis give Harry Emerson Fosdick hear hearers Henry Ward Beecher human wants humor idea illustration impelling important influence interest Journal of Speech jury Kallikak family kind lecture listeners logical main heads means ment mental method mind motives never occasion orator persuasion Phillips Brooks picture Platform Project political campaign speech present principle problem proposition Psychology question Quintilian radio reason response Rufus Choate Seminar Project sentence sermon social speaking specific speech situation speeches of courtesy stereotypes student suggestion things thought tion topic vivid vocabulary vote Wendell Phillips whole William Jennings Bryan Woodrow Wilson words write York young speaker