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Abraham Lincoln's speeches, both famous and now-forgotten, are among those in a new anthology (Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

Book Collects Greatness in 'American Speeches'

Oct 30, 2006 (All Things Considered) — A new, two-volume anthology of U.S. speeches offers ample evidence that political speaking has framed and rallied every great event from the Revolution to the present. Editor Ted Widmer talks about the famous and not-so-famous orators in American Speeches.

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During the campaign season, a typical candidate's stump speech may belie the rich and eloquent history of American rhetoric.

A new, two-volume anthology of American speeches from the Library of America offers ample evidence that political speaking has framed and rallied every great event from the Revolution to present day.

Ted Widmer, director of the John Carter Brown Library at Brown University and a former speechwriter for the Clinton White House, edited the two volumes.

Widmer includes obvious classics like the Gettysburg Address. But the pages of these books are filled with remarks that have been forgotten over time, even if their authors have not.

And American Speeches also includes speeches from orators far less famous than Abraham Lincoln, such as Robert Brown Elliott, an African-American member of Congress during Reconstruction.

Widmer discusses these speakers, both famous and not-so-famous, religious influences on Western oratory, and differences between speeches by Martin Luther King, Jr., and Malcom X.

Copyright 2013 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

More Presidential Speeches

Harry S. Truman, July 15, 1948: Speech to the National Democratic Convention Accepting Presidential Nomination

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