The World's Great Speeches: Fourth Enlarged (1999) EditionLewis Copeland, Lawrence W. Lamm, Stephen J. McKenna This outstanding compendium of 292 great speeches contains addresses from nearly every historical era and nation, from the formal orations of ancient Greece and the speeches of Julius Caesar, to modern-day addresses by Nelson Mandela, Ronald Regan and Václav Havel. Among the memorable speeches included here are Pericles' funeral oration, St. Bernard's advocacy of the Second Crusade, William Jennings Bryan's "Cross of Gold" speech, Winston Churchill's "Blood, Sweat and Tears" address, Richard Nixon's speech to the astronauts on the moon, Malcolm X's address on the Black Revolution, and many more. Readers will also find time-honored declamations by St. Francis, Martin Luther, John Calvin, Napoleon, Victor Hugo, Leon Trotzky, Mohandas K. Gandhi, Dylan Thomas, Fulton J. Sheen, Adlai Stevenson, Walter Reuther, and many others−over 240 speakers in all. For this newly updated edition, Stephen J. McKenna, Assistant Professor of English at The Catholic University of America, has added 14 important speeches delivered between 1974 and 1997. These new selections include Barbara Jordan's Opening Statement to the House Judiciary Committee for the Nixon Impeachment Proceedings (1974); Alexander Solzhenitsyn's Harvard Commencement Address (1978); Ronald Regan's First Inaugural Address (1981): Nelson Mandela's Address to a Rally in Cape Town on His Release from Prison (1990); Václav Havel's Address to a Joint Session of Congress (1990); the Earl of Spencer's Tribute to Diana, Princess of Wales (1997); and more. Rich with drama of history, the speeches in this volume will serve you time and time again by suggesting provocative themes and historical parallels, and by providing apt quotations, important reference passages, and a wide range of other valuable material. |
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Page 94
... laughter , but the philosophic sadness tempers it . Toward the strong it is mockery ; toward the weak it is a caress . It dis- quiets the oppressor , and reassures the oppressed . Against the great it is raillery ; for the little it is ...
... laughter , but the philosophic sadness tempers it . Toward the strong it is mockery ; toward the weak it is a caress . It dis- quiets the oppressor , and reassures the oppressed . Against the great it is raillery ; for the little it is ...
Page 125
... laughter . ] But mobilization on our frontier had been in full progress since the night between July 30th and 31st . [ " Hear , hear ! " ] While we , at the request of Russia , were meditating in Vienna , the Russian forces drew up ...
... laughter . ] But mobilization on our frontier had been in full progress since the night between July 30th and 31st . [ " Hear , hear ! " ] While we , at the request of Russia , were meditating in Vienna , the Russian forces drew up ...
Page 126
... [ Laughter . ] This was an evasive reply to our ques- tion , if not a refusal . [ “ Quite true . " ] The Kaiser nevertheless gave the order to respect the French frontier absolutely . This order was strictly carried out with a single ...
... [ Laughter . ] This was an evasive reply to our ques- tion , if not a refusal . [ “ Quite true . " ] The Kaiser nevertheless gave the order to respect the French frontier absolutely . This order was strictly carried out with a single ...
Page 187
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Page 202
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