Edward Everett's public service gave him many opportunities to demonstrate his power as a public speaker, and his orations became the stuff of legend. He could hold forth for several hours with such skill and drama that listeners lost all track of time.
After preparing meticulously and producing a text for his speech, once at the odium, he set the manuscript aside and spoke from memory. He had delivered memorable speeches commemorating Revolutionary battlefields at Lexington, Concord and Bunker Hill; now he was expected to find the words to dignify and consecrate Gettysburg.
In the weeks before the dedication, he immersed himself in military reports, researching and reconstructing every aspect of the three-day battle so that he could recreate it, step by awful step, for his listeners. He strove, as always, to be an accurate historian and to stir the emotions of the audience.
As was his habit, he sought to elevate the oration by evoking connections to Greek antiquity. On his lengthy speech. Everett relived the battle and denounced the enemy. Many in the crowd were moved to tears.
--Old Secesh
No comments:
Post a Comment