American Orators Before 1900: Critical Studies and SourcesBernard K. Duffy, Halford Ross Ryan "The editors offer 55 case studies of orators, each chapter consisting of from three and one-half to more than nine pages of text followed by a brief section entitled 'Informational Source' that includes short bibliographic summaries and important research sources intended particularly `for those beginning to investigate an orator's rhetoric.' Entries close with a short chronology of major speeches. . . . Duffy and Ryan's hope that their book will 'prove useful' should be fulfilled quickly, for American Orators Before 1900 is the most extensive reference collection on its topic. By introducing all 55 rhetors in situ and illuminating such an array of rhetorical peculiarities, universals, power, triumphs, and influences on the past and present, this book becomes indispensable to college and large municipal libraries." Quarterly Journal of Speech. |
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Page 102
... party must apply the Wilmot Proviso to them . Attractive as it was to some , the strategy was doomed , as was the party , by an inability to reconcile antislavery and disunion , and in 1852 it died . By 1858 Corwin wrote to a cousin ...
... party must apply the Wilmot Proviso to them . Attractive as it was to some , the strategy was doomed , as was the party , by an inability to reconcile antislavery and disunion , and in 1852 it died . By 1858 Corwin wrote to a cousin ...
Page 228
... party as virtue personified . It also gained him a national audience . By 1876 his reputation was secure , and he supported James G. Blaine as Republican party standard - bearer . On June 15 , 1876 , he placed Blaine's name in ...
... party as virtue personified . It also gained him a national audience . By 1876 his reputation was secure , and he supported James G. Blaine as Republican party standard - bearer . On June 15 , 1876 , he placed Blaine's name in ...
Page 261
... party . This convention sounded the death knell of the old Whig party and the beginnings of the Republican party in Illinois . The " House Divided " speech of 1858 to the state Republican convention after he had been nominated to run ...
... party . This convention sounded the death knell of the old Whig party and the beginnings of the Republican party in Illinois . The " House Divided " speech of 1858 to the state Republican convention after he had been nominated to run ...
Contents
John Quincy Adams | 7 |
Fisher Ames | 22 |
Henry Ward Beecher | 35 |
Copyright | |
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