Public Speaking eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 326 pages of information about Public Speaking.

Public Speaking eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 326 pages of information about Public Speaking.

The Peroration.  A peroration is a conclusion which—­whatever may be its material and treatment—­has an appeal to the feelings, to the emotions.  It strives to move the audience to act, to arouse them to an expression of their wills, to stir them to deeds.  It usually comes at the end of a speech of persuasion.  It appeals to sentiments of right, justice, humanity, religion.  It seldom merely concludes a speech; it looks forward to some such definite action as casting a vote, joining an organization or movement, contributing money, going out on strike, returning to work, pledging support, signing a petition.

These purposes suggest its material.  It is usually a direct appeal, personal and collective, to all the hearers.  Intense in feeling, tinged with emotion, it justifies itself by its sincerity and honesty alone.  Its apparent success is not the measure of its merit.  Too frequently an appeal to low prejudices, class sentiment and prejudice, base motives, mob instincts will carry a group of people in a certain direction with as little sense and reason as a flock of sheep display.  Every student can cite a dozen instances of such unwarranted and unworthy responses to skilful perverted perorations.  Answering to its emotional tone the style of a peroration is likely to rise above the usual, to become less simple, less direct.  In this temptation for the speaker lies a second danger quite as grave as the one just indicated.  In an attempt to wax eloquent he is likely to become grandiloquent, bombastic, ridiculous.  Many an experienced speaker makes an unworthy exhibition of himself under such circumstances.  One specimen of such nonsense will serve as a warning.

When the terms for the use of the Panama Canal were drawn up there arose a discussion as to certain kinds of ships which might pass through the canal free of tolls.  A treaty with Great Britain prevented tolls-exemption for privately owned vessels.  In a speech in Congress upon this topic one member delivered the following inflated and inconsequential peroration.  Can any one with any sanity see any connection of the Revolutionary War, Jefferson, Valley Forge, with a plain understanding of such a business matter as charging tolls for the use of a waterway?  To get the full effect of this piece of “stupendous folly”—­to quote the speaker’s own words—­the student should declaim it aloud with as much attempt at oratorical effect as its author expended upon it.

Now, may the God of our fathers, who nerved 3,000,000 backwoods Americans to fling their gage of battle into the face of the mightiest monarch in the world, who guided the hand of Jefferson in writing the charter of liberty, who sustained Washington and his ragged and starving army amid the awful horrors of Valley Forge, and who gave them complete victory on the blood-stained heights of Yorktown, may He lead members to vote so as to prevent this stupendous folly—­this unspeakable humiliation
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Public Speaking from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.