Henry fought against Lord Dunmore , who ordered all the gunpowder taken away from local patriot forces. He believes that fighting for ones freedom is a great responsibility of God and their country, he aligns God on their side of the colonists. The outcome would have been different if henry wouldn’t have announced his meaningful speech , war would haven’t happened
Other may view what he did as cowardly. Henry reacted this way for several reason. You have to assume after repelling the first assault fatigue must have set in, making Henry extremely tired physically and mentally. Also Henry did not run straight away from the battle, he only ran once he saw some of his fellow soldiers fleeing. Some of the soldiers he saw fleeing were veterans of the army.
The whole army squad that Henry was fighting with were all rookies they had never seen a dead man or ever killed anyone, none of them had experience. Him seeing his first dead man was kind of a little wake up call, so he could be prepared and that maybe could be him in the future. I believe it also showed him he's going to have to fight back because people are coming for him , not just one , many. This “meeting” with the man laying the ground without movement affect henry in a positive way because it warned him and made him ready for anything. As he says in chapter 3 “His curiosity was quite easily satisfied.
He needed to get them to refuse to be a dog to the British and get the freedom they deserve. He used pathos as a persuasive technique in his speech to highlight fear and emotion to scare the colonists into agreeing with him. “I know of how way of judging the future but by the past.” (Henry 110) This was an effective quote because it is showing no matter what Henry is there with the colonist through this journey and that he cannot tell them exactly what is going to happen, but he can make a presumption based on what has already happened.
His rhetorical appeal is extremely important in doing this. Henry did many things through the speech to ensure that everyone would have a well understanding of what he is trying to say, such as, using God as a powerful way to get his point across; showing how necessary it is to go to war with England; and proving to his audience that England has blatantly betrayed them as colonist. All three of these rhetorical appeals help Henry throughout his speech to get his audience to change or make them firm believers in what Henry is trying to say. Using these three strategies Henry can easily persuade his audience because all of these things he is saying stop and make them think because the words he uses connect to his audience on a personal
He calls upon Britain’s intentions with their use of their military force in the colonies when he said, “Ask gentlemen, sir, what means this martial array, if its purpose be not to force us to submission? Can gentlemen assign any other possible motive for it? Has Great Britain any enemy in this quarter of the world, to call for all this accumulation of navies and armies?” Through this rhetorical question, Henry was saying that the British’s only desire for their forces in the colonies was to sustain the loyalty of the colonists toward Britain and to fetter the colonists from true freedom. One may believe that claim is true because, if losing the loyalty of the colonists wasn't a threat, the English would never have bothered to send their troops in the first place.
Henry continues by emotionally describing how he is ready to endure any pain that will come his way from finally learning the truth. He feels he is ready to stand up and be change that must come from the colonies, despite any despair he might face. 2. “There is no retreat but in submission and slavery! Our chains are forged!
Henry argues that they can’t back out now and if they do, they’ll be enslaved by Britain. He says with their current ideas he can already see his country being enslaved. He gives an example of the Boston Massacre,— Britain troops open fire and murder 5 civilians— saying that Britain had already conquered Boston by establishing fear in their hearts. He has now provoked the audience and has gotten their attention and argues that war is inevitable for their freedom, and they mustn’t fear it and should let it come. In particular, “But when shall we be stronger?
This is a clear sign that Henry was not prepared to enlist in the war and was. A true hero would have stayed through it all and would have never given up. At the beginning of the story when only wanted to go against what his mother said, he was immature and misunderstanding. Henry’s mother told him, “Henry, don’t be a fool” (Crane 4). Even though his mother attempted change his mind, the next morning he set out to enlist.
While the regiment managed to fend off another attack, they may have lost soldiers. Henry worried for himself above all and worried that whether if he stayed or not he would still die, regardless of the result of the battle. After the adrenaline rush of the first attack Henry came to his senses and feared for his life, knowing full well his chances of surviving another attack would be low. Especially now that he was caught off guard and was more scared than the first battle. Despite knowing his regiment might survive he was sure he wouldn 't and ran away to save his own life.
To Henry, it was important for him to convince the public to fight so they wouldn't back down from the British and risk becoming enslaved. During Patrick Henry's speech, he used a load of pathos when he informs the convention that things will without a doubt end very badly if they don’t take on the
Henry stayed with his battalion during the first battle in an attempt to become a heroic soldier. He then ran from the second battle, scared to die. Henry didn’t flee during the first battle because he had great visions of the idealistic soldier. He wanted to prove to himself that he could be that brave soldier. This is shown during his farewell with his school mates.
He is able to inspire, intimidate, motivate, arouse and persuade, just by using his words. In the speeches he gives before battles, Henry is able to inspire his men for battle. One way he does this is by painting visions of the future. For example, in his St. Crispin’s day speech, he promises that “He that outlives this day, and comes safe home” will have a day in their honour. This is effective in motivating his men to fight hard and win the battle.
No it was not wrong for Henry to run from the battlefield. He ran from something he had heard offrom only in stories from those who actually fought. He believed that war was honor filled. The war in reality, when Henry realized was filled with blood, death, and the reports of muskets and cannons. This creates the conflict: would he stay and become one of the faceless and nameless corpses on the battlefield, or run and live to fight another day.
In the first battle Henry fires into the battle, blindly not seeing his enemy. As the second battle approaches, he gets scared so that is when he flees the scene of the second battle. I do not think flees the first battle because he did not know that to expect, so when the second battle approaches he knows that there real possibility of him dying. Before his first battle he has to think of his courage. "Whatever he had learned of him self was here no avail.