Speeches for Practise, by 
Grenville Kleiser 
 
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Title: Model Speeches for Practise 
Author: Grenville Kleiser 
Release Date: May 6, 2006 [EBook #18323] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MODEL 
SPEECHES FOR PRACTISE *** 
 
Produced by Kevin Handy, Suzanne Lybarger, Martin Pettit and the 
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MODEL SPEECHES FOR PRACTISE 
BY
GRENVILLE KLEISER 
Formerly Instructor in Public Speaking at Yale Divinity School, Yale 
University. Author of "How to Speak in Public," "Great Speeches and 
How to Make Them," "Complete Guide to Public Speaking," "How to 
Build Mental Power," "Talks on Talking," etc., etc. 
[Illustration: Publisher's logo] 
FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY NEW YORK AND LONDON 
1920 
COPYRIGHT, 1920, BY 
GRENVILLE KLEISER 
[Printed in the United States of America] 
Published, February, 1920 
Copyright Under the Articles of the Copyright Convention of the 
Pan-American Republics and the United States, August 11, 1910 
 
PREFACE 
This book contains a varied representation of successful speeches by 
eminently successful speakers. They furnish, in convenient form, useful 
material for study and practise. 
The student is earnestly recommended to select one speech at a time, 
analyze it carefully, note its special features, practise it aloud, and then 
proceed to another. In this way he will cover the principal forms of 
public speaking, and enable himself to apply his knowledge to any 
occasion. 
The cardinal rule is that a speaker learns to speak by speaking, hence a 
careful reading and study of these speeches will do much to develop the
student's taste for correct literary and oratorical form. 
GRENVILLE KLEISER. New York City, August, 1919. 
 
CONTENTS 
PAGE INTRODUCTION--Aims and Purposes of Speaking--Grenville 
Kleiser 11 
After-Dinner Speaking--James Russell Lowell 29 
England, Mother of Nations--Ralph Waldo Emerson 37 
The Age of Research--William Ewart Gladstone 44 
Address of Welcome--Oliver Wendell Holmes 52 
Good-Will to America--Sir William Harcourt 65 
The Qualities That Win--Charles Sumner 71 
The English-Speaking Race--George William Curtis 88 
Woman--Horace Porter 100 
Tribute to Herbert Spencer--William M. Evarts 113 
The Empire State--Chauncey M. Depew 120 
Men of Letters--James Anthony Froude 133 
Literature and Politics--John Morley 139 
General Sherman--Carl Schurz 147 
Oration Over Alexander Hamilton--Gouverneur Morris 154 
Eulogy of McKinley--Grover Cleveland 164
Decoration Day--Thomas W. Higginson 170 
Faith in Mankind--Arthur T. Hadley 177 
Washington and Lincoln--Martin W. Littleton 181 
Characteristics of Washington--William McKinley 187 
Let France Be Free--George Jacques Danton 193 
Sons of Harvard--Charles Devens 199 
Wake Up, England!--King George 208 
 
INTRODUCTION 
AIMS AND PURPOSES OF SPEAKING 
It is obvious that the style of your public speaking will depend upon the 
specific purpose you have in view. If you have important truths which 
you wish to make known, or a great and definite cause to serve, you are 
likely to speak about it with earnestness and probably with eloquence. 
If, however, your purpose in speaking is a selfish one--if your object is 
self-exploitation, or to serve some special interest of your own--if you 
regard your speaking as an irksome task, or are unduly anxious as to 
what your hearers will think of you and your effort--then you are 
almost sure to fail. 
On the other hand, if you have the interests of your hearers sincerely at 
heart--if you really wish to render a worthy public service--if you lose 
all thought of self in your heartfelt desire to serve others--then you will 
have the most essential requirements of true and enduring oratory. 
THE NECESSITY OF A DEFINITE OBJECT 
It is of the highest importance for you to have in mind a clear
conception of the end you wish to achieve by your speaking. This 
purpose should characterize all you say, so that at each step in your 
speech you will feel sure of making steady progress toward the desired 
object. 
As a public speaker you assume serious responsibility. You are to 
influence men for weal or woe. The words you speak are like so many 
seeds, planted in the minds of your hearers, there to grow and multiply 
according to their kind. What you say may have far-reaching effects, 
hence the importance of careful forethought in the planning and 
preparation of your speeches. 
The highest aim of your public speaking is not merely to instruct or 
entertain, but to influence the wills of men, to make men think as you 
think, and to persuade them to act in the manner you desire. This is a 
lofty aim, when supported by a good cause, and worthy of your greatest 
talents and efforts. 
THE KEY TO SUCCESS IN SPEAKING 
The key to    
    
		
	
	
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