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Patrick Henry Read his biography on page 99..

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1 Patrick Henry Read his biography on page 99.

2 Speech to the Virginia Convention
Read the speech as we listen to it. Look for how Henry is trying to persuade his audience: What is he appealing to – ethos, pathos, logos What techniques is he using? Patrick Henry’s Speech Reenactment

3 ETHOS = ETHICS Use of “…we shall not fight our battles alone. There is a just God…” (103).

4 PATHOS = EMOTION Images of slavery, mistreatment

5 LOGOS = LOGIC Refutations: Armies of Great Britain formed against the colonies, petitions denied

6 Techniques Repetition, Parallelism Rhetorical Questioning
Comparisons – Metaphors, Similes, Analogies

7 Repetition Tried to petition the British for better treatment: “ten years”(101 – 102) “We must fight!” (102) War: “Let it come!” (103) Slavery Light Tyranny

8 Parallelism “We have petitioned; we have remonstrated, we have supplicated; we have prostrated ourselves…” (102) “Our petitions…our remonstrances…our supplications” (102) “the vigilant, the active, the brave…” (103) “give me liberty or give me death”(103)

9 Comparisons Seeing Clearly: “Lamp of Experience” (101), “Lights”(101 – 102) Description of Great Britain: “tyranny”, “tyrannical”, “insidious” Imagery of Slavery: “those chains”, “bound us hand and foot”, “submission and slavery”, “chains and slavery”

10 Rhetorical Questioning
“What means this martial array, if its purpose be not to force us to submission?”(102) “Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction?” (102) “Why stand we here idle?”(103) “What is it that gentlemen wish?”(103)

11 Concessions Concession: admitting or acknowledging the other side as having a true, just, or proper argument

12 Refutations Refutation: Denial of the truth/accuracy of the other side. Concession + “But,” “However,” “Although”…

13 Refutations Opponents argue that British have innocent motives for building up their military. Henry argues that they do not have any enemies in this part of the world other than the colonies “Has Great Britain any enemy in this quarter of the world, to call for all this accumulation of navies and armies? No sir, she has none” (102).

14 Refutations Opponents argue that they should try to negotiate with the British Henry argues that they already have and that all of the petitions have been spurned by the British. “We have petitioned; we have remonstrated; we have supplicated; we have prostrated ourselves before the throne…” (102).

15 Credits Patrick Henry picture comes from


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