Lend me your ears : great speeches in history

by William Safire

Hardcover, 1992

Status

Available

Publication

New York : Norton, 1992.

Description

"Lend Me Your Ears collects, in one immensely rich compendium, some two hundred of history's outstanding instances of oratorical eloquence. They are selected, arranged, and introduced by William Safire, one of America's most influential political columnists, himself a former speechwriter and language scholar. From Demosthenes mounting an angry defense against his attackers in one of his immortal philippics, to Abraham Lincoln consecrating the memory of the Union dead at Gettysburg, to Winston Churchill rallying a beleaguered Britain with a promise of "blood, toil, sweat and tears," to Salman Rushdie unexpectedly electrifying an audience with his paean to the necessity of free speech - this anthology contains the finest examples of the art of speechmaking in human experience." "The book is arranged by theme and occasion: Memorials and Patriotic Speeches, War and Revolution Speeches, Tributes and Eulogies, Debates and Argumentation, Trial Speeches, Gallows and Farewell Speeches, Sermons, Inspirational Speeches, Lectures and Instructive Speeches, Speeches of Social Responsibility, Media Speeches, Political Speeches (in Safire's words, "the anthologist's mother's milk"), and Commencement Addresses. Each speech is expertly introduced by the editor, who places the speech's occasion in historical context and analyzes the particular techniques that give the speech its force and effect. William Safire enlivens many of these introductions with personal anecdotes of the circumstances of the speechmaker and the speech. His Introduction is a brisk, compact, effective short course in how to make a great speech - with a cornucopia of examples to follow." "No one faced with the need to go before an audience of any size to argue, persuade, uplift, introduce, memorialize, or amuse should be without Lend Me Your Ears. It serves equally as a work of permanent reference use and as a treasure-house for the browser in search of inspiration, instruction, and entertainment. In this anthology, editor and subject matter have met to result in a book that draws from the ages - and that will last for decades as the definitive word on human eloquence."--Jacket.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member jontseng
A good complement to MacArthurs more Anglophile Penguin compilations.
LibraryThing member PointedPundit
My Favorite Speech Compendium

Hands Down!

This is my absolute favorite speeches collection. William Safire, the man who penned “nattering nabobs of negativism,” draws from the ages to illustrate the power of human eloquence

Our age is dominated by speeches that will never qualify for inclusion.
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This former speechwriter, current columnist and guardian of our language, selected, arranged and introduced 220 examples of history’s finest oratory. Arranged by theme and occasion, each speech is introduced by the editor, given historical perspective and analyzed for techniques that gave it force and staying-power.

This is the most valuable kind of book. Since I purchased it 20 years ago, I have spent hours savoring its content. My favorite speech in it remains Jack Kemp’s November 30, 1990 salute to Winston Churchill in which he skillfully and eloquently turns into an intense and unequivocal plea for an armed intervention in the Persian Gulf. It remains a superb example of an ideologue whom brings clarity and passion to dais.

No one who faces an audience and attempts to inspire, fortify, entertain, convince or memorialize should be without a copy of this wonderful book.
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Language

Barcode

4883
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