Public Speaking
An excerpt from our Public Speaking guide...
Speech and Talk. The high value here placed upon speech must not be transferred to mere talk. The babbler will always be justly regarded with
contempt. Without ideas, opinions, information, talk becomes the most wasteful product in the world, wasteful not only of the time of the person
who insists upon deliver[6]ing it, but more woefully and unjustifiably wasteful of the time and patience of those poor victims who are forced to
listen to it. Shakespeare put a man of this disposition into The Merchant of Venice and then had his discourse described by another.
"Gratiano speaks an infinite deal of nothing, more than any man in all Venice. His reasons are as two grains of wheat hid in two bushels of
chaff: you shall seek all day 'ere you find them, and when you have them, they are not worth the search."
But the man who has ideas and can best express them is a leader everywhere. He does the organizing, he makes and imparts the plans, he carries
his own theories and beliefs into execution, he is the intrusted agent, the advanced executive. He can act for himself. He can influence others
to significant and purposeful action. The advantages that come to men who can think upon their feet, who can express extempore a carefully
considered proposition, who can adapt their conversation or arguments to every changing condition, cannot be emphasized too strongly.
Speech an Acquired Ability. We frequently regard and discuss speech as a perfectly natural attribute of all human beings. In some sense it is.
Yet an American child left to the care of deaf-mutes, never hearing the speech of his own kind, would not develop into a speaker of the native
language of his parents. He doubtless would be able to imitate every natural sound he might hear. He could reproduce the cry or utterance of
every animal or bird he had ever heard. But he would no more speak English naturally than he would Arabic. In this sense, language is not a
[7]natural attribute as is hunger. It is an imitative accomplishment acquired only after long years of patient practice and arduous effort. Some
people never really attain a facile mastery of the means of communication. Some mature men and women are no more advanced in the use of speech
than children of ten or fifteen. The practice is life-long. The effort is unceasing.
A child seems to be as well adapted to learning one language as another. There may be certain physical formations or powers inherited from a
race which predispose the easier mastery of a language, but even these handicaps for learning a different tongue can be overcome by imitation,
study, and practice. Any child can be taught an alien tongue through constant companionship of nurse or governess. The second generation of
immigrants to this country learns our speech even while it may continue the tongue of the native land. The third generation—if it mix
continuously with speakers of English—relinquishes entirely the exercise of the mother tongue. The succeeding generation seldom can speak it,
frequently cannot even understand it.
The Table of Contents...
CONTENTS
CHAPTER PAGE
I. SPEECH
II. THE VOICE
III. WORDS AND SENTENCES
IV. BEGINNING THE SPEECH
V. CONCLUDING THE SPEECH
VI. GETTING MATERIAL
VII. PLANNING THE SPEECH
VIII. MAKING THE OUTLINE OR BRIEF
IX. EXPLAINING
X. PROVING AND PERSUADING
XI. REFUTING
XII. DEBATING
XIII. SPEAKING UPON SPECIAL OCCASIONS
XIV. DRAMATICS
APPENDIX A
APPENDIX B
INDEX
This is a reproduction of a time proven guide to public speaking written in the 1920's. It is highly detailed and consists of 160
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