American Rhetorical Discourse
, by Reid, Ronald F.Note: Supplemental materials are not guaranteed with Rental or Used book purchases.
- ISBN: 9780881338393 | 0881338397
- Cover: Paperback
- Copyright: 12/1/1994
A model of Christian charity | p. 24 |
A brief recognition of New-England[']s errand into the wilderness | p. 37 |
Abraham's offering up his son Isaac | p. 54 |
Sinners in the hands of an angry god | p. 65 |
Excerpt from Joy and salvation by Christ; his arm displayed in the Protestant cause (peace of 1763) | p. 79 |
Declarations | p. 86 |
Letter II in letters from a farmer in Pennsylvania to the inhabitants of the British colonies | p. 92 |
Boston Massacre oration - March 5, 1774 | p. 98 |
Liberty or death | p. 108 |
Excerpt from Common sense | p. 112 |
To the people of Pennsylvania, excerpt from letter III | p. 128 |
Censure of John Pigg | p. 133 |
Opening speech at the constitutional convention | p. 138 |
Exchange at the constitutional convention regarding a proposed second convention | p. 142 |
Closing speech at the constitutional convention | p. 145 |
Exchange at the Virginia ratifying convention | p. 148 |
First State of the Union address | p. 174 |
Excerpts from Memoranda on the constitutionality of the National Bank | p. 179 |
Farewell address | p. 186 |
First inaugural address | p. 203 |
The role of government in internal improvement | p. 208 |
The protective tariff : excerpt from The American system and excerpts from South Carolina exposition and Protest (original draft) | p. 213 |
Bunker Hill monument address | p. 227 |
Speech at Fort Meigs | p. 246 |
Campaigning in madison county (1823) and comments on King Andrew | p. 256 |
Tormented by mockers | p. 261 |
Debate before the Choctaw and Chickasaw council | p. 266 |
Farewell to Black Hawk | p. 274 |
The evils of intemperance | p. 278 |
To the public | p. 286 |
Excerpt from Abolition of negro slavery | p. 291 |
Declaration of sentiments | p. 309 |
Pastoral letter and response to the pastoral letter | p. 315 |
The murder of Lovejoy | p. 324 |
Declaration of sentiments | p. 331 |
Protest | p. 335 |
What to the slave is the Fourth of July? : excerpt from an Oration, at Rochester, July 5, 1852 | p. 338 |
Webster-Hayne debate on Foot's resolution | p. 346 |
Excerpts from Senate speeches on the compromise of 1850 | p. 371 |
House divided | p. 396 |
Excerpts from The Lincoln-Douglas debate at Freeport | p. 407 |
Excerpt from The character of Washington | p. 422 |
Cooper union address | p. 426 |
First inaugural address | p. 442 |
First inaugural address | p. 448 |
Gettysburg Address | p. 456 |
Second inaugural address | p. 460 |
Congressional debate over reconstruction policy | p. 463 |
Senate speech introducing and excerpts from The Senate debate on the Fifteenth aAmendment | p. 479 |
The new south | p. 492 |
Excerpt from Oration on the life, character and public service of the Hon. John C. Calhoun | p. 501 |
Cotton states exposition address | p. 504 |
Or Mr. Booker T. Washington and others | p. 509 |
Acres of diamonds | p. 520 |
Standard Oil and foreign missions | p. 534 |
The forgotten man (abridged) | p. 544 |
Wealth | p. 559 |
Old-time political speeches | p. 568 |
Populist songs : "the independent man" and "good-bye, my party, good-bye" | p. 572 |
Cross of gold | p. 577 |
The man with the muck rake | p. 586 |
First inaugural address | p. 596 |
Speech to the Order of the Knights of Labor | p. 602 |
The labor question | p. 607 |
Working class politics | p. 614 |
At a public meeting in Charleston | p. 619 |
Petition to Congress for woman suffrage | p. 628 |
Call for the anniversary convention of the American Equal Rights Association | p. 630 |
Speech to the anniversary convention of the American Equal Rights Association | p. 633 |
Excerpts from Is it a crime for a citizen of the United States to vote? | p. 637 |
Testimony to the select committee on woman suffrage : United States Senate, March 7, 1884 | p. 642 |
The solitude of self | p. 647 |
The crisis (abridged) | p. 656 |
American empire : the march of the flag (abridged) | p. 672 |
American empire : acceptance speech, 1900 (abridged) | p. 679 |
War message | p. 690 |
The League of Nations debate | p. 700 |
The arsenal of democracy | p. 713 |
America's present emergency | p. 724 |
War message | p. 730 |
Progressive government | p. 734 |
First inaugural address | p. 747 |
Fireside chat on banking | p. 752 |
A time for choosing | p. 756 |
First inaugural address | p. 767 |
An iron curtain has descended (abridged) | p. 774 |
The threat of a red Asia | p. 779 |
Inaugural address | p. 787 |
How to save lives and political face in Vietnam | p. 791 |
Speech to the National Association of Evangelicals (the "evil empire" speech) | p. 796 |
Address to a joint session of Congress and the American people | p. 804 |
Senate speech on free speech in wartime (abridged) | p. 812 |
A moral necessity for birth control | p. 819 |
Speech to the Greater Houston Ministerial Association | p. 831 |
I have a dream | p. 837 |
Separation vs. integration : a debate | p. 844 |
Testimony before Senate hearings on the Equal Rights Amendment, May 6, 1970 | p. 864 |
Excerpts from Testimony before the House of Representatives on the Equal Rights Amendment, October 20, 1983 | p. 870 |
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