Lectures on Rhetoric and Oratory: Delivered to the Classes of Senior and Junior Sophisters in Harvard University, Band 1Hilliard and Metcalf, 1810 - 160 Seiten Before becoming President of the United States, John Quincy Adams was a Harvard professor of language, rhetoric and oratory, with this book comprising his lectures. Published in 1810 when Quincy Adams was in his forties, this work is a collection which demonstrates the breadth of knowledge which he passed to students eager to learn about the arts of speaking. The early lectures cover the basic principles of oratory and eloquence in the context of public speaking, and the origins of rhetoric as a celebrated art form in ancient Greece and Rome. It is clear that the author possesses an intense knowledge of the subject and its professional application. Later on in the text are more specific lectures, such as the importance of perfecting oratory for the courtroom, and the personal qualities a good speaker should cultivate. Keeping tight control of one's emotions when speaking or debating with others, and delivering compelling lectures from the church pulpit, are also discussed at length. Although this material is well over 200 years old with much of the language archaic by modern standards, the ideas and principles espoused by Quincy Adams remain both relevant and important to students and those working in fields where speech is vital. |
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... manner to the mind of the judge , or a tangled tissue of blended facts and law must be familiarly un- ravelled to a jury ; that is , at the very crisis , when the contest is to be decided by the au- thority of the land fearning and ...
... manner , in which it is applied , a blessing or a curse ; the pest of nations , or the benefactress of human kind . We Here then we might rest our defence . might rely on the trite and undisputed maxim , that arguments , drawn from the ...
... manner , and Cicero , by observing to make each of them speak conformably to his known character , avails himself of the occasion to discuss the important questions , involved in the theories of the art . The first of these dialogues ...
... manner . Cicero therefore determines , that there are sub- jects , peculiarly fitted to each of these three modes of speaking , and that the perfection of the orator consists in the proper use and variation of them all , according to ...
... manner , in many of those eloquent discourses , and gives you the reasons , which inspired his sublime , indignant vehemence in the accusation of Verres , and of Catiline ; his temperate , insinuating elegance upon the Manilian law ...
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