The Young Priest's Keepsake by Michael Phelan
page 71 of 138 (51%)
page 71 of 138 (51%)
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With this general acknowledgment both gentlemen will, we are sure, be content when we spare the reader repeated references to either titles or pages of their works. [Side note: What is rhetoric?] [Side note: Cicero] At the threshold of our subject we are met by the question--What is rhetoric? Mr. Power gives the answer--"The resources of rhetoric are natural resources, and rules for composition are only records intended for the guidance of those who have not discovered the originals for themselves. The first speakers had no rules and no experience to draw upon but their own. In course of time speeches came to be reported, and then the secret of their eloquence disclosed itself. All the qualities of the orator were then observed; the highest and the best were chosen and combined and erected into an art, which was named Rhetoric. This art was designed to _aid_ speakers and not as a means of _fettering their natural ability_." Cicero has put almost the same thoughts in different words--"I consider that, with regard to all precept, the case is this; not that orators by adhering to them have obtained distinction in eloquence, but that certain persons have noticed what men of eloquence have practised of their own accord, and formed rules accordingly; _so that eloquence has not sprung from art, but art from eloquence_." This is not only sound theory, but sound sense. It shatters a time-worn fallacy and gives hope and encouragement to the student. Every man can become an orator in a greater or a less |
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