The Colonial IdiomDavid Potter, Gordon L. Thomas In The Colonial Idiom, David Potter and Gordon L. Thomas have selected representative and important speeches and exhortations delivered by famous Americans from the beginning of the Massachusetts Bay Colony to the signing of the Declaration of Independence. To a much greater extent than realized, public speaking and dispuĀtation were important features of daily life in Colonial America, because with the printing presses turning out only limited materials speeches were the major vehicles of expression. Thus the reader not only confronts the ideas and ideals that nurtured the founding of this nation but experiences the impact of freedom to express them, the sense of individual worth pointing the direction of a people "unfolding into sovereignty." The selections are arranged in five categories--those dealing with academic, legal, occasional, political, and religious matters. They are drawn from every stratum of colonial activity--from the classrooms, clerical studies, town meetings, provincial assemblies, and the bar. Great names abound in these pages, but, frequently, expounders of great ideas found here are unremembered figures whose works cannot be found easily elsewhere. The editors have carried out careful research on each speech to assure the authenticity of the text. They have added, for each selection, a note on the speaker and on the place where he delivered his address. This collection, made especially for students of rhetoric and public address, will engage the interest of all students of intellectual movements. The speeches here presented are indispensable sources of information to those readers wishing to follow the political and social ideas that made the history of this fateful century. |
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... answer to John Dickinson's speech of May 24 , 1764. As soon as Mr. Dickinson had concluded his speech , Mr. Galloway rose to answer the objections raised against the petition to change the form of government . The text is from the ...
... Answer ; but , as the House of Representatives have declined that mode of proceeding , and as your principles in Govern- ment are very different , I am obliged to make separate and distinct replies . I shall first apply myself to you ...
... Answer seem to infer a Supremacy in the Province at the same time that you acknowledge the Supremacy of Parliament , for otherwise the Rights of the Subjects cannot be the same in all essential respects , as you suppose them to be , in ...
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References to this book
Delightful Conviction: Jonathan Edwards and the Rhetoric of Conversion Stephen R. Yarbrough,John C. Adams No preview available - 1993 |