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How To Lincoln's Ethos In I Have A Dream Speech

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The Declaration of Independence was signed on July 4, 1776. This document not only declared the birth of the United States of America and independence from Great Britian, it purported the nation that all men are created equal. At the time, Slavery was a major US industry, and the equality of all men was certinaly not being demonstrated. This expiriment with democracy was slow to include all people. In 1865 Abraham Lincoln gave his brief, powerful speech “The Gettysburg Address”, and he refers to the ideas expressed in the documents. A century later, Martin Luther King Jr. speaks at the foot of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. and delivers his famous “I Have a Dream” speech.
There are many important similarities and differences between …show more content…

The second similarity between the two is they both used Ethos as a form of speech for their crowds. King described how he mad many hardships growing up under discrimination of the blacks, in paragraph 9 it states “We cannot be satisfied as long as our bodies, heavy with fatigue of travel cannot gain lodging in models of cities”. Stating how the refulations have been tough on the black race. Lincoln stated “The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here”. He is stating our soldiers has risked their lives for the rights of the …show more content…

For starters, King aggressively, verbally attacks the states and govenours, by stating “Some of you have come fresh from narrow jail cells. Some of you have come from areas where your freedom left you battered by storms of persecution, and staggered by the winds of police brutality.” On the other hand, Lincoln really didn’t dive into those arguments. Another major difference is the fact that King lived through the discrimination, and went through the struggles. In his 22nd paragraph, he states “This is our hope, this is the faith i go back to the South with.” He is stating that he has hope for the nation to overcome the racist disregards for his race. He says he’s from the south, which is where a lot of the discrimination occurs. Lincoln really did not live through the pain, he just more or less witnessed the very beginning. One of the last differences between the two speeches and overall them as a whole, is that King and Lincoln were two different types of people. Lincoln was the president of the United States , and King was frankly a public speaker and just a citizen going through the times of those years. Lincoln couldn’t really have a lot of leeway with what he could’ve said to the public. King could attack the goverment/authority with his words like he did saying his race was being, “The veterans of creative suffering:. King really could say whatever he wantedt to because it didn’t

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