Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Speech Analysis

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A speech by definition is “the expression of or the ability to express thoughts and feelings by articulate sounds” (Google Dictionary). When you read or hear a speech there is always a feeling - maybe happiness, sadness, or string of thought. Theodore Roosevelt left many minds racing after his Conservation speech. So much so, that many laws have been passed to protect our American soil and national park openings. Roosevelt always mentioned foresight and morality during his speech. Roosevelt even spoke in such a voice that made the audience feel comfortable and at home. It was comical, yet serious, and that’s what made the audience listen to him. He left many questions in their heads about the future. At the time, the Industrial Revolution was occurring and the mass exploitation of fossil fuels were being used, and no one really saw anything wrong with it until this speech. Roosevelt wanted them to think about the future ahead of them. He wanted to make them see the mass wasteland America would turn into. Roosevelt needed the audience to recognize the problems before mass destruction would happen. In America, the …show more content…

This past President wanted the items we had to elongate into our children’s lives by stating the following: “Yet our fathers, though they knew so little of the resources of the country, exercised a wise forethought in reference thereto.”( Paragraph 21) . The fact that their ancestors kept their land fertile and safe is what influences Roosevelt to speak to the audience about doing the same for their future children, he wants the art of progression to

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