Model Speeches for Practise eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 103 pages of information about Model Speeches for Practise.

Model Speeches for Practise eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 103 pages of information about Model Speeches for Practise.

An interesting fact—­and one which I love to recall—­is that the only time Washington formally addrest the Constitutional Convention during all its sessions over which he presided in this city, he appealed for a larger representation of the people in the National House of Representatives, and his appeal was instantly heeded.  Thus was he ever keenly watchful of the rights of the people in whose hands was the destiny of our Government then as now.

Masterful as were his military campaigns, his civil administration commands equal admiration.  His foresight was marvelous; his conception of the philosophy of government, his insistence upon the necessity of education, morality, and enlightened citizenship to the progress and permanence of the Republic, can not be contemplated even at this period without filling us with astonishment at the breadth of his comprehension and the sweep of his vision.  His was no narrow view of government.  The immediate present was not his sole concern, but our future good his constant theme of study.  He blazed the path of liberty.  He laid the foundation upon which we have grown from weak and scattered Colonial governments to a united Republic whose domains and power as well as whose liberty and freedom have become the admiration of the world.  Distance and time have not detracted from the fame and force of his achievements or diminished the grandeur of his life and work.  Great deeds do not stop in their growth, and those of Washington will expand in influence in all the centuries to follow.

The bequest Washington has made to civilization is rich beyond computation.  The obligations under which he has placed mankind are sacred and commanding.  The responsibility he has left for the American people to preserve and perfect what he accomplished is exacting and solemn.  Let us rejoice in every new evidence that the people realize what they enjoy and cherish with affection the illustrious heroes of Revolutionary story whose valor and sacrifices made us a nation.  They live in us, and their memory will help us keep the covenant entered into for the maintenance of the freest Government of the earth.

The Nation and the name of Washington are inseparable.  One is linked indissolubly with the other.  Both are glorious, both triumphant.  Washington lives and will live because what he did was for the exaltation of man, the enthronement of conscience, and the establishment of a Government which recognizes all the governed.  And so, too, will the Nation live victorious over all obstacles, adhering to the immortal principles which Washington taught and Lincoln sustained.

FOOTNOTE: 

[8] Address by William McKinley, twenty-fourth President of the United States, delivered at the unveiling of the Washington Statue, by the Society of Cincinnati, in Philadelphia, May 15, 1897.

“LET FRANCE BE FREE!"[9]

BY GEORGE JACQUES DANTON

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Model Speeches for Practise from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.