Susan B Anthony Speech Analysis

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What do the most famous speeches in history have in common? Motivation, selection, and, dedication. In this essay I am going to compare 4 speeches in which 4 people used their declaritive and outstanding vices to express their feelings in a huge way that impacted history. Also with these speeches I will be evaluating the major parts that lead to success and the parts which may have been faulty. The speeches to be evaluated are, "The Gettysburg Address" by Abraham Lincoln, Susan B. Anthony on a woman's right to vote, "Ain't I a woman?" delievered by Sojourner Truth, and finally "I have a dream" given by the remarkable Martin Luther King Jr. Depending on your audience and the time, a speech can often be the most powerful way to motivate people, …show more content…

Anthony once said, "Failure is impossible." That is a big goal to set for yourself, and she certainly furfilled it. Spending her entire life organizing and leading womens sufferage movements and also movements towards black rights, Ms. Anthony was a woman who knew what she wanted and knew that it would be accomplished someday if she gave it her all. Susan B. Anthony believed in the cause that all Americans equal and that left little room for error, she also once said, "that the right which woman needed above every other, the one indeed which would secure to her all the other, wasw the right of sufferage." She became the general of the sufferage troops and worked until her death in 1906, only 14 years before women finally recieved the right to vote. So, after spending her life fighting for this, what was the speech she is most remembered by in her success? This speech was delievered in her trail after being arrested for unlawfully voting in the presidental election of November 5, 1872 in Rochester, New York. This speech during the trial would allow her to spread her words of sufferage and cominment to a much larger audience than before. So what exactly did she say that day? "The preamble of the deferal constitution says; "We the people of the United States, in order to form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare, and sucre the blessing of liberty to ourselves and our posterity, do ordain and establish this constituation for the United States of America." It was we, the people; not we, the white male citizens, nor yet we, the male citizens, but we, the whole people who formed the union." In this part of the speech, she delievers the part of we the whole people. She made people stand up and remember that we are a nation united, not a nation divided. Susan B. Anthony accomplished much in her life and pushed the way towards more even after her death, detail and

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