liA^SH^lKlwtt Cornell University Library The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924027198849 Cornell University Library PN 4168.B35 1901 3 1924 027 198 849 THE ART OF EXTEMPORE SPEAKING H I N 1' S FOB THE PULPIT, THE SENATE, and THE BAB BY M. BAUTAIN, VICAB-OSNEKAL AND PROI'SSSOR AT THE SOBBONNE, Eta ETC. BT A MEMBER OF THE NEW YOKK BAK. NINTH EDITION NEW YORK CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS 1901 L901 ■a Ifl •P ft? |\5 2.0-6 EmxBSD according to Act of CoDgrui, In the ye&r 185S, by CHARLES SCKIBNEB, Id the Clerk% 0£Qce of the District Court of tbe Uolted Statee, for the Southern District o| Kflw York. P E E F A C E . The following Work, by the eloquent M Bautatn, has no counterpart or rival in the Eng;lish language, so prolific of treatises upon Rhetoric, and the separate portions of the arts of composition and delivery. All those parts of oratory, however necessary to public speaking, or conducive to success in its per- formance, yet leave comparatively aside the precise business of off-hand extemporising. If we mistake not, the subject will be found to be handled with masterly ability by the au- thor of this volume, who, keeping his end ever in view, and exempKfying in the treatment of his matter that cla/rte — so distinctively French, and which QiiintUian says is the first quality n PREFACE. of style — subordinates everything to the one grand purpose of extemporisation. The treatise not only supplies a desideratum in the literature of the language, but it minis- ters to a need peculiarly existing under our representative system of popular government. It is true, and felt to be so, — that remark of an acute observer of American institutions and manners, that " In no country whatever is a genius for writing or speaking a more use- ful or commanding endowment than in this." To render the work more aptly suited to the precise requirements among ourselves, rhrec chaptei's are added by the American Editor, which it is hoped will serve to smooth the way for the unpractised, or unassisted stu- dent of delivery. Cicero says in his treatise De Oratore, " There is requisite to the orator the acuteness of the logician, the subtilty of the philosopher, the skilful harmony, almost, of the poet- the memory of a juriconsult, the tragedian's voice, and the gesture oi the most finished actors." But he speaks of the highest, fDr he adds immediately that TEEFACE. V5i '' nothing is more rare among men than a per- fect orator." The gradations, as in all arts, are infinite, but a certain degree, is within the reach of most men, and many in their efibrts to advance, will become indebted, consciously or imconsciously, to this "dmirable little work of M. Bautaut. CONTEKTS. PART 1 CHAPTER L •Mi bpo^tion of the Sabject. — Defimtaon of an extem- poraneous Speech ..... 1 CHAP. n. The Qoalificationa necessary for Public Speaking . 10 CHAP. in. Mental aptitudes for Public Speaking, capable of bdng acquired, or formed by study . . 48 CHAP. IV. Fliyiieal Qualities of the Orator, natural and acquired S4 CONTENTS. PART II. CHAP. V. MTision of the Subject . . .108 CHAP. VL Preparation of the Flac .... 113 CHAP. vn. Political and Porensic Speaking . , . 124 CHAP. vni. SpeaMng from the Christian Pulpit, and Teaching, . 138 CHAP. IX Determination of the Subject and Conception of the Idea of the Discourse .... 146 CHAP. X. Conception of the Subject. — ^Direct Method . . 166 CHAP. XI. Cionception of the Subject. — Indirect Method . . 168 CHAP. XII. Tba Formation and the Arrangement of Ideas , 176 CONTENTS. Xi CHAP. XIII. PASI Arrangement of the Flan . . 18S CHAP. XIV. Ciharacter of the Flan . . . , .189 CHAP. XV. f'1r.al Preparation before Speftklne , -JOi' CHAP. XVI. Final Intellectual Preparation . , - . aOil CHAP. XVIi. final Moral Preparation . , , . 21'J CHAP. xvra. Bodily Preparation . . . , . S28 CHAP. XIX. The SiEcourse ...... 288 CHAP. XX. The Beginning, or Exordium . . . 24( CHAP. XXI. ISatrsnce into the Subject .... 341 XU OONTKMTO OHAP xxn T'le Development • . . - ^itt CHAP. xxm. The Orisis of tHe Diseourse .... 20S CHAP. XXIV. The Close of the Discourse, or Peroration . 280 CHAP. XXV. After the Discourse ..... 28) ADDITIONAL CHAPTERS CHAP. XXVI. The Logic of the Orator . . 298 CHAP. XXVII. The Voice in Public Speaking . . 82S CHAP. xxvm. Koleg of Order and Debate . . . lU THE ART EXTEIPOEE SPEAKING. PART I. CHAPTER I. BHCPOSinON OS" THE SUBJECT. — DEFINITION 0» AN EXTEMPORANEOUS SPEECH. Let us in the first place exactly determine the subject to which we are to devote our atten- tion, in order that nothing may be expected beyond that which it is our wish and our power to commit to these pages. We have no intention of composing a trea- tise on eloquence. The world has had enough on this subject since the time of Aristotle, Cicero, Quintilian, Fenelon, and many others. B 2 STATEMENT OF THE SUBJECT. Treatises on rhetoric abound, and it appears scarcely necessary to produce a new one. It is not proposed to treat of the art of writing, nor, consequently, of reciting or pro- perly delivering a discourse elaborated at lei- sure, and learnt by heart. A man may certainly become a great orator by writing speeches and reciting them well. Witness Bossuet, Bourdaloue, MassUlon, and many others. It is possible in this manner to instruct, to touch the feelings, and to persuade the hearer ; which is the object of the art of oratory. Our subject is confined withia narrower limits, viz. to the art of spealdng well and suitably in a given situation, whether in the Christian pulpit or in the professorial chair, at the bar or ia deli- berative assemblies. We shall therefore confine our attention solely to a discourse, neither written nor learnt by heart, but improvised; necessarily composed by the orator on the very moment of delivery, without any preparation or previous combination of phrases. Let ug then determine, in the first place, what is an improvised (or extempore) speech, and the manner in which a speech is extemporised. STATEMENT OF THE SUBJECT. 3 Extemporisation consists of speaking on Itie firs! fmpnlse; that is to say, without a preliminary arrangement of phrases. It is the instanta^ neous manifestation, the expression, of an actual thought, or the sudden explosion of a feeling or mental movement. It is very evident that extemporisation can act only on the form of words, the form of a dis. course ; for, in order to speak, it is necessary to have something to say, and that something must already be existing in the mind, or still more deeply in the intimate feeling of the orator. Nevertheless, the thought or feeling may be in a concealed state, and the possessor may not have clearly appreciated or distinctly perceived it at the moment of opening his lips under the impression of some circumstance or some un- foreseen cause of excitement. Ideas and conditions of the mind cannot be extemporised ; and the more perfectly they are possessed or felt the greater is the probability of their lively explosion or of their being deve- loped with force and clearness. "We will not speak of those exceptionaJ cases where a passion, involuntarily excited oi aroYuted, bursts forth of a sudden in some sub b2 4 STATEMENT OF THE SUBJECT. lime words, or with an eloquent harangna " Facit indignatio versum," says Juvenal. Every feeling unexpectedly aroused in an ex- cited mind may, like a volcano, scatter around bximing lava, or like a cloud, charged with storms and bursting suddenly from electric commotion, produce thunder and lightning, a terrible and devastating hail or a salutary and fertilising shower. No advice can be given for 3uch a situation, for nature alone fiimishes the means, in proportion to individual constitu- tion and development. There lies the source of all poetry, of aU eloquence, and of all artistic power. Improvisation such as this recognises no rules, and rejects teaching. The coarsest, the most ignorant man may thus occasionally be eloquent, if he feel vividly and express him- self energetically, in words and gesture. We will devote our attention only to pre- pared extempore speaking, that is to say, to those addresses which have to be delivered in public before a specified auditory, on a particular day, on a given subject, and with the view of achieving a certain result. It is true that in such cases the discourse, if written beforehand, can be recited or read STATEMENT OF THE SUBJEOT. S There are some persons who are masters of reci tation or of reading, and can thus produce a great effect. In this manner, doubtless, both thoughts and words can be better weighed, and the speaker can deliver what he has to say with greater precision. But there is this drawback, that the discourse is colder, less apposite, anc* approximates too nearly to dissertation. Nay, should any unforeseen circumstance occur, such as an objection, a rejoinder, or a discussion of any kind, the speaker not expecting, may find himself stopped short or at fault, to the great detriment of his cause or his subject. Moreover, a preacher, a professor, or a senator, who is liable to be called upon to speak at any moment, has not always the time to compose a discourse, still less to learn it by rote. In speaking from his fulness, therefore, as the saying is, he can speak oftener, and produce a greater effect, if he speak well. His speaking will also be more lively and brilliant, — more real, and more apposite. Ori- ginating with the occasion, and at the very moment, it will bear more closely on the sub- ject, and strike with greater force and prei cision. His words will be warmer from thcil b8 6 STATEMENT OF THE SUBJECT. freahness, and they will in this manner com municate increased fervour to the audience They ■will have aU the energy of an instan- taneous eflFort, and of a sudden burst. The vitality of thought is singularly stimu. lated by this necessity of instantaneous pro- duction, by this actual necessity of self-expres- sion, and of communication to other minds. It is a kind of child-bearing in public, of which the speaker feels all the effort and aU the pain, and in this he is assisted and supported by the sympathy of his hearers, who witness with lively interest this labour of mental life, and who receive with pleasure this bantling of thought ; that is to say, an idea weU conceived and brought to light ; well formed, with a fine expression, or with a body of graceful and well- constructed phraseology. But it is not our object to compare these two methods of public speaking, nor to place in the balance their advantages and defects. It is possible to excel in both ways, and every one must endeavour to discover the manner which best suits him, and the method by which, according to his nature, his qualities and his position, his words can achieve the STAIEMENT OF THE SUBJECT. 7 greater amount of good, instruct more clenrlj and more fidly, and touch the heart more effeo tually. What suits one does not suit another. God distributes his gifts as seems best to Him ; and every tree bears fruit according to its kind. It is important for man to discover the gift he has received, . to make use of it with usury, and to discharge faithfully his high vocation. "Fiunt oratores, nascuntur poette," has said QuintUian; meaning, doubtless, that poetic genius is a gift from heaven, and that oratorical talent can be acquired. This is only half true ; for if teaching and labour can con- tribute to the formation of an orator, neither one nor the other will give him the germ and the power of eloquence. They can excite and nourish, but they can never ignite the sacred fire. But amongst those who have received this divine gift of words some have only been enabled to exercise it with the pen, and occasionally even the most eloquent writers are incapable of delivering in public that which they konw so well to compose in pri- vate. They are troubled and embarrassed be. fore even the least imposing audience. J.J b4 5 STATEMENT OF THE SCRTBOT. IlousBeau could never speak in public ; and the Abbe de Lamennais, whose style is so ngorous, never ventured to enter the piilpit, and was unable to address even a meeting of children. Others, on the contrary, possess the faculty of easily expressing in public their feelings and their thoughts. The presence of hearers stimu- lates them, and augments the elasticity of their mind and the vivacity of their tongue. It ia these only that we shall address, for we have spoken in this maimer through life and have never been able to do otherwise. Many a time, however, have we made the attempt, by preparing an exordium, a tirade, or a perora- tion, with the intention of speaking better or in a more striking manner. But we have never succeeded in reciting what we had pre- pared, and in the manner in which we had constructed it. Oui- laboured compositions have always missed then- object, and have made us embarrassed or obscure. Thus, it appears, we were made, and we have been forced to follow our nature. lu such matters the lesson to be learnt is in turning to account the demands of nature ^\'hich must be satisfied. STATEMENT OF THE SUBJECT. 'i As extemporisJDg a speecli regards the form only, as has been before stated, it follows that, before attempting to speak in this manner, two things are necessary. 1. The foundation of the discoui-se, or the thought and succession of thoughts to be expressed. 2. The means of expression, or the language in which they are to be spoken, so as to avoid the necessity of seeking the words at the same moment as the ideas, and the risk of stopping short of or being embarrassed in the composition of the phrase- ology. In other terms, the speaker must know what he wishes to say and how to say it. Improvisation, therefore, supposes the special qualifications on which we are about to speak, not precisely with the view of teaching the means of acquiring them, as for the most part they are gifts of nature ; but to induce those to cultivate and develope tnem who have the good fortune to possess them ; and, above all, to point out the signs by which any one may dis- cover whether he be capable of speaking in public, and how, in so doing, to succeed. 10 KATOEAL QUALITIBS NECEBSAET. CHAP. n. THE QITAI.rPICATIONS NECBSSAET FOE PUBLIC SPEAKIKG. At the root of every real talent, whatever it may be, there lies a natural aptness, conferring on the person endowed with it a particular power; and this aptness depends alike on the intellectual temperament and the physical or- ganisation ; for man being essentially composed of mind and body, all that he does in reason, or in his quality as a reasonable being, comes from these two portions of his being and from their mutual relations. The mind commands, it is true, and the body must obey like an instrument ; but the instrument has also its influence, especially over the talent of the artist, by the manner in which it responds tft his wishes, to his feelings, to the motions which he commimicates to it, to the vigour which he seeks to display. Thus speaking is an art and the iinest of arts; it should express NATURAL QUALITIES NECESSAET. 11 Ihe mind by form, ideas by words, feelings by BOimds, all that the mind feels, thinks, and wishes by signs and external action. To ob- tain BkUl in this art, therefore, there are some qualifications wMch-regard the mind, and others «rhich depend on the body. The dispositions of the mind are natural or acquired. The former, which we are about to set forth in this chapter, are — 1. A lively sensibility. 2. A penetrating intelligence. 3. A sound reason, or, as it is commonly called, good sense. 4. A prompt imagination. 5. A firm and decisive will. 6. A natural necessity of expansion, or of communicating to others ideas and feel lags. 'I. Finally, a certain instinct which urges a man to speak, as a bird to sing. § 1. — A lively Sensibility. Art has its root in sensibility, and although it dapends much on the body, and especially on the nerves which are its physical medium, sen- 12 KATCliAL QUALrriES NECE8SAET. sibility is nevertheless one of the prmoipal powers of the mind, not to say a faculty, ai the word faculty denotes a manner of acting, and as sensibility is a manner of suffeiing or of sustaitung an action. Thus the mind which lives only by its affini- ties, and which for action always requires an Impression, acts only in proportion to the in- citements it receives, and the manner ia which it receives them. It is, therefore, in this pe culiar manner of receiving and appropiiatinj impressions of things that consists the vivacity of sensibility necessary to speaking, as to every artistic expression. Every man feels according to his sensitiveness ; but all do not feel in the same manner, and thus are neither able to ex- press what they feel in the same manner, noi disposed to the same kind of expression. Hence vocation to the different arts, or the natural inclination of the mind to express one particular thing which it feels the more, and with the greater pleasure. In this, also, lies the origin of taste in art, and for a particular art, whether in the exercise of such art or in the appreciation of vis works. Some have more taste and faci. Uty in the plastic arts ; others in the acoustic NATURAL QUALITIES NECK88AET. ]3 arts; and even in the exercise of the same art there are different dispositions to a certain mode of expression which produce different etyles. Thus in poetry there are poets who compose odes, epic poetry, tragedy, comedy, satyr, idyls and eclogues, &c. &c., which are all poetic expressions of the human mind ; and so far they resemble each other ; but they differ in the object which they reproduce, in the manner of representing it, and a poet in one style rarely succeeds ia another. He can sing in one strain and not otherwise, as the song of a lark is not that of a nightingale. It ia thus in the art of speaking, in eloquence as regards the object to be expressed. One speaker is more suited to set forth ideas, their connexion, and their gradations. lie discerns perfectly the congruity, the difference, the con- trast of thoughts, and thus he will deliver them suddenly with much facility, delicacy, and subtilty. He has perception, a taste for idea; he conceives it distinctly, and will there- fore enunciate it gracefully and clearly. Such a one is made to teach and instruct. Another has a greater enjoyment of every thing relating to the feelings, the affections, ttf 14 NATUBAL QUALITIES NECBBSAET. Boft or strong emotions. He will therefort employ witli greater pleasure and greater Buccess all that can touch, moTe, and hurry away : he will, above all, cause the fibres of the heart to vibrate. Such a one wiU be an orator rather than a professor, and will be better able to persuade by emotion than to convince by reason. A third delights in images and pictures. He feels more vividly everything that he can grasp and reproduce in his imagination ; he therefore takes pleasure in these reproductions. Such a one will therefore be specially a descriptive speaker, and will rise almost to poetry in his prose. He will speak to the imagination of hia hearers rather than to their heart or mind: he will affect but little, and instruct still less; but he will be able to amuse and interest, he will attract by originality, by the variety of hij pictures, and by the vivacity and brilliancy of kis colouring. In these different instances we see that sen- sibility is vividly excited either by ideas, by feelings, or by images ; and it is evident that ha who would extemporise a discourse in one of these three methods must begin by feeling WATUEAL QUAirriES NECESSAET. li vividly the subject of ttHcIi he has to speak; and that his expression will always be p^opo^ tionate to the impression of it he wiE have received and retained. But if sensibility must be strong, it must nevertheless not be excited to excess; for it then renders expression impossible from the agitation of the mind and the over-excitement of the nervous system, which paralyses the organs. Thus, the precept of Horace, "Si vis me flere, dolendum est primum ipsi tibi," is true only for those who write ia their closet, and does not apply to the orator. Before the public, he must not weep, nor even be moved to such a point that his voice will fail him, or be stifled bjj sobs ; he must weep with hia voice, and not with hia eyes ; he should have tears in his voice, but so as to be master of them. At times, doubtless, a great effect may bo produced by the very inability to speak, caused by the enthusiasm of feeling or the violence of grief; but then the discourse is finished, or, rather, it is no longer needed, and little matter, if the object be attained. But, for the art of oratory, sensibility must be restrained suiBci 16 NATUEAL QUALITIES NECESSAET. eiitly at least ibr words to run their propeJ course. The feelings must not explode at once^ but escape little by little, so as gradually to animate the whole body of the discoui-se. It is thus that art idealises nature in rejecting all that from instinct or passion may be too rough or impetuous. The character of Christian art, that which renders it sublime, is, that in all its works there is a predominance of mind over matter, of the soul over the body, of man over nature. Christian feeling is never intemperate, never disorderly. It is always restrained within a certain point by the power of that will whicli, assisted by the higher strength supporting it, governs events, or rather, does not yield to them; and when it appears overcome it bends beneath the storm of adversity, but is righted Oy resignation, and does not break. It is more than the thinking reed of Pascal; it is a reed that wills. For this reason the types of Chris- tian art will nevel' be surpassed. Never beneath the sun wUl there be seen images more sublime or more beautiful than the figures of Jcsug Christ and the Virgin. In this point of view the Christian orator, inasmuch as he is a Chris, liaii, is very superior to the Pagan orator : h« NATURAL QUALITIES NECESSAET. 11 coiicuives, lie feels very differently, both earthly and heavenly things, and his manner of feeling is more spiritual, pure, and worthy of man, foi being less material, it gives to his expressioE something noble, elevated and superhuman, approaching the language of heaven. The same may be said for the statement of ideas. It is doubtless necessary that they should be felt strongly with all that they embrace, so that they may be analysed and developed; that the developed may be re-em- bodied, again concentrated, and reduced to unity. In this operation there is an infinity of gradations which must be delicately perceived and appreciated. But if this feeling become too strong, or take too completely possession of the mind, analysis or exposition becomes impossible ; the speaker is absorbed by the con- templation only of the general idea, is unable to enter upon its development, and from that moment he is incapable of speaking. This ia the case with men of genius, but of an exag- gerated mental sensibOity, who feel the necessity of writing to display their thoughts, because they require time to reflect and recover themselves from the fulness of the idea which (ivercomo» C £8 NATCEAX Q^AITTIES ITECESSAET, them at first, or when they are required to speak of a sudden. Such was probably the case with Rousseau, who was endowed with remarkable sensibility of mind. It may even happen that a too vehement and over exclusive perception of an idea may convert it into a fixed idea, and may lead to madness. Everything is so well balanced in our existence, everything must be done in such measure and proportion, that, no sooner do we exceed, however little, that mean point where lies the relative perception of hu- manity, — ^than we fall into exaggeration, which destroys and renders powerless as much as de- ficiency itself. — In medio virtua. For description, sensibility, and even exqui- site sensibility, is required, but here also not too much, otherwise we wander to impressions of detail, and we end by producing a species of poem or monograph of each flower or object which pleases us. It is what is called in painting tableaux de genre, which may for an instant attract and amuse, but which do not represent one deep idea or one worthy of art. It is in literature that kind of poetry or romance which the Ger. mans, and especially the English, delight in, and NATDKAL QUAIiITIES NECESSAUY. 19 which consists in painting ia the greatest detau the commonest things of life. Impressions ar« then taken from the domestic hearth, froHi the life of a family, or of a country, as sesthetio sentiments, as effects of art, falling into a paltry realism, which lowers art ia making it descend to the Commonplace and absurdities of reality. Finally, it is the defect of those preachers who delight in continual descriptions, whether of physical or of moral nature, whose sermons, sub- ject to their taste for imagery, are only galleries of pictures which may amuse those who think to recognise in them the portraits of others, bui which can never instruct nor touch any one. He who would speak well, therefore, must feel what he has to say with sufficient strength to express it with warmth and vivacity; but hia feeling must not attain that vehemence which prevents the mind from acting, and paralyses the expressi«» from the very fulness of the feeling. This would be a sort of intellectual apoplexy, taking away the gift of speech, and tendering it powerless by excess of life. 20 IfATUEAL QUALITIES NECESSABT. § 2. — Keen Intelligence. In speaking, tlie feeling or that which is felt, must he resolved into ideas, thoughts, images, and thence into words, phrases, language, as a cloud or condensed vapour is transformed and distilled into rain. "Eloquium Domini sicut imbres," says the Psalmist. The faculty which effects this transformation, hy the operation of the mind accounting inwardly and reflectively for all that is passing through it, is intelligence, or the faculty of reading in ourselves. It is for this reason that animals possessing sensi- bility, and at times senses even more subtle than those of man, are incapable of speaking in a strict sense, although, like all other bernge on earth, and especially living beings, they have a spontaneous language, by which ia naturally manifested aU that takes place in them. They have no intelligence, and thus they have neither consciousness nor reflection, though there exists in them a principle of lifSf gifted with sensibility and instinct, which givei them the semblance of human intelligence, but it cannot be maintained that they are reasonable, which would imply liberty and moral responsj NATUEAL QUALirnSS NECESSAET. 21 bility for their acts. For reason to exist, it i« uecessary that the mind, capable of feelino- and seeing, should have the power of self-possession by means of reflection, and to consider and analyse by thought all that it has perceived and seen. Thus is formed in us an intel- lectual world peopled by oui conceptions, that is to say, with ideas, with notions and images, which we can compare, combine, and divide in a thousand manners, according to their approx- imation or their difierence; and which are finally expressed in speech, — the successive development of which is always the analysis of thought. Thus every extemporised discourse presui*- poses a preliminary operation of thought.- The thought must have been well conceived, held, and grasped in a single idea which contains the whole substance. Then, for the exposition of this idea, it must have been divided into its principal parts, or into other subordinate ideas as members of it, and then again into others still more minutely, until the subject is exhausted. This multitude of thoughts must be well ar. ranged, so that at the very moment each may arrive in tte place marked out for it, and 23 NATUEAL QUALITIEB NECE88AKT. appeal in its turn in the discoarse to plaj its part and fulfil its function, the value o\ which consists in the antecedents which pre- pare and the consequences which develope it, as figures in an arithmetical operation have value in themselves and also by their position. Much intelligence is therefore required for tliis preparatory labour, so useful in extem- porisation; or, in other words, for the elabora- tion of a plan, without which it would be risk to hazard on ground so dangerous and so slippery. The first condition of speaking is to know what is intended to be said, and the greater the intelligence employed in the pre- paration of the speech, and the more clearly ia it conceived, the greater the probability el presenting it well to others or of speaking well. That which is well conceived is clearly enua. oiated. Nevertheless, this first laboiu- is not sufficient ; it is easy enough in the silence of the closet, pen in hand, to elaborate a plan to be com- mitted to paper, and polished at leisure. But this plan must pass from the paper lo the head, and be there established in divisions and subdi NATDBAL QXTALITIES NE0EB8AEY. 23 visions, according to the order of thoughts both afi a whole and in detail ; which cannot be well done, and in a sure and lasting manner, urJesa the mind keeps the ideas linked by their inti- mate, and not by their superficial relations; — ^by accidental or purely external associations, such as are foimed by the imagination and the senses. In a word, there must reign between all the parts of the plan an order of filiation or generation; which is called the logical con- nection. Thus, the logical connexion is the product of the intelligence which intuitively perceives the connexion of ideas, even the most removed and the most profound; and of the rea'!on which completes the view of the intelligence, by showing on the one hand con- nexion by a chain of intermediary ideas, and on the other the order of this connexion, by means of reflection, and unites them in a thought to be presented, or an end to be at- tained. Then comes a third step, which exacts even a greater subtilty and greater promptitude of mind. This plan which has been committed, to paper, which is now careftilly kept in the head, mnst be realised in words, and endowed with 04 24 ITATCEAL QrAUTIES HECE6SABT. flesh and life in the disconrse. It is like dn bones wbidL, by the breath of the orator, are of a sadden to reassmne their mnsclee, nervos and skin, and to rise, eadi in its plac«>, to form a living body, beaotiM to behold. The speaker nmst successively pa^ before his h<-irers all that he carries in his mind — all his ideas, in suddenly giving to each, in its place, 'jody, covering, colour, and life. He should, how- ever, while speaking, Janus-Uke, see doubli^ , within, at his plan ; without, at tlie thread of his discourse; so as to keep within the line of his thought, without disturbing his arrangement, or diverging. He must, finally, be able, as on a day of battle, suddenly to modify what he has beforehand prepared; {oV lowing whatever may present itseL^ and this without relinquishing his principal idea, which sustains aD, and without which he w^ould become the plarthing of chance. He requires still many things, which wiH be pointed out later, when we shall have to bpeak of the discourse itself; and all of which, like those which we have just mentioned, presnmc-s the exercise oi an intense, rapid, and most penetrating intel- tigence. fTATDKal. QUAUTIES NECESSAKT. 25 § 3. — Might Meason or €food Sense. A great deal of talent may exist without common sense, and this is often the case with clever persons, and especially those who wisi to appear clever. By endeavonring to stady objects under new phases, to say new things, or things apparently new, they end by never con • sidering them in a right light; and the habit of regarding them in all manner of aspects, takes away the faculty of seeing them in full and directly, in their true meanings and natural beaiings. Now, nothing is so &tal to extemporisation as this wretched &cility of the mind for losing itself in details, and neglecting the main point. Without at this moment speaking of the construction of the plan, wherein simplicity and clearness, to which good sense is singularly conducive, ought, above all things, to prevail, it is evident that tHs quality, so useful in con- duct and in buaness, is more than ever so in the instantaneous formation of a discourse, and in the dangerous task of extemporising, whether as regards m:!tter or manner. Good sense is the instinctive action of right 86 KATtrXAL QUAUITES NE0E8SABT. reason, discriminating witli a rapidity of foci mg, and by a sort of taste, what is or is not suitable in any given situation. Tborefore, it is a sudden appreciation of a thousand bearings depending on circumstances, as when, amidst tlie fervor of delivery and from tho general effect of the address — ^things not to be esti- mated by the plan alone, but declaring them- selves on the iastant — an idea on which stress should be laid — what part of it should be ne- glected — ^what should be compressed — ^what should be enlai'ged upon — ^must all be promptly seized. Then a new thought which suggests itself and must be inti'oduced — an explanation which might run to too great a length and which must be abridged — an emotion or effect to be excited as you pass on without losing sight of the main effect — a digression into which you may enter without breaking the guidiug thread of this labyiiath and while at need recovering it — all have to be judged of, decided upon, and executed at the very moment itself, and during the unsuspended progress of the dis- course. The same applies to the form or style of th« ipeech. How many mental and literary pr> SATUKAL QITAUTIKS NECESSAKT. 27 prioties to be observed 1 A doubtful phras* coming into tho mouth and to be discarded, — au ambitious, pretentious expression to be avoided, — a trite or commonplace term which occurs and to be excluded, — a sentence wluch is opened with a certain boldness and the close of which is not yet dear,— even while you arh finishing the development of one period, your view thrown forwai*d to the next thought, and to tho link which is to connect it with that which you are ending ! Ti'iJy there is enough to produce giddiness when one reflects on tlio matter; nevertheless, the discernment of such a multiplicity of points must be instantaneous, and indeed it is performed with a kind of cer- tainty, and as it were of its ovnx accord, if the subject havo been fitly prepared, if you be thoroughly in possession of it, and if you be well inclined at the moment. But in order to walk with this direct and firm step through a discourse, which arises, as it were, before the orator l:i proportion as he advances, like an enchanted forest, all teeming with BOiHjeries and apparitions, in which so many different paths cross each other, — in order to iccept none of these brilliant phantoms savt 2s NATCRAX QrAIJTIES NECESSAEY. those which can be serviceable to the sabject, d» pelling like vain shadows all the rest, — in order to choose exactly the road which best leads to your destination, and, above all, to keep con- Btantly in that which you have marked out for yourself beforehand, shunning all the other byways, however alluring they may appear, and not allowing yourself to be carried away or to swerve from your line, either in gait or deport- ment, — you most assuredly require that dear, decisive, and certain sight which good sense gives, and that kind of instinct or tarte for truth which it alone produces. § 4. — Readiness of ImaginaMon. Imagination is like a double-feced mirror, in part turned towai'ds the outer world, and re- flecting its objects, in part towards the light of ideas, tinging it with its hues, forming it into representations, and disposing it in pictures, while decomposing it as the prism the solar ray. It is thus that speech renders metaphysical objects more approachable and comprehenable; it gives them a body, or a raiment, whick Di&kes them \'isible and almost palpable. HATUKAL QUAUTIES NECESSAKT. 29 Ima^nation is one of the most necessary of the orators fiiculties, and especially to I'itti -who extemporises, fiist, in order that he may be able to fix his plan well in ^ 3 miud — for it ia diiefly by means of the imagination that it is there fixed, or painted; in the second place, in order that it may be preserved there in full life, well connected, and well arranged, imtfl the moment for realising it or putting it forth by means of the discourse. Imagination is also very osefiil to him in order to represent sud- denly to himself what he wishes to express to others when a new thought arises, and. when an image, germinating, as it were, in the heat of oratorical action, like a flower opening forthwith under the sun's rays, is present^i miexpectedly to the mind. Then the instant he has a glimpse of it, after having rapidly de- cided whether it suits the subject and befits its place, he, while yet spelling, seizes it eagerly, passes it warm beneath the active machinery of the imagination, extends, refines, developes, makes it dnctUe and glittering, and marks it at once with some of the types or moulfla which imagination possesses. Or else, if we may be allowed another comparison, the thou^t 30 NATURAL QtrALITIEB NEOESSAET. passes through the presses of the imagination, like those sheets of paper which revolve b& tween the cylinders of mechanical presses, and Msue forth all covered with characters and images. Now this most complicated and subtle labour must be performed with the quickness of light- ning, amidst the onward current of the discourse, which cannot be arrested or slackened without- becoming languid. The imagination ought then to be endowed with great quickness in the formation and variation of its pictures ; but it requires also great clearness, in order to pro- duce at the first effort, a well-marked image, the lines and outlines defined with exaQtitude, and the tints bright, — so that language has only to reproduce it unhesitatingly, and uncon- fusedly, as an object is faithfully represented In a spotless glass. For you must not grope for your words while speaking, imder penalty of braying like a donkey, which is the death of a discourse. The expression of the thought must be effected at the first stroke, and de- cidedly — a condition which hinders many men, and even laen of talent, irom speaking in public. Their imagination is not sufficiently supply NATURAL QtJAMTlES NTLOESSAKT. 81 ready, or clear; it works too slowly, and ii left behind by the lightning of the thoughts which at first dazzles it, a result due either to a natural deficiency, or to want of practice ; or else — and this is the most general case with men of talent, it arises from allowing the mind to be too much excited and agitated in the presence of the public and in the hurry of the moment ; whence a certain incapacity tor speaking, not unlike inability to walk produced by giddiness. § 5. — Firmness and Decision qf Will. Unquestionably courage is necessary to ven- ture upon speaking in public. To rise before an assembly, often numerous and imposing, without books or notes, carrying everything in the head, and to undertake a discourse in the midst of general sUence, with all eyes fixed on you, under the obligation of keeping that audience attentive and interested for three quarters of an hour, an hour, and sometimes longer, is assuredly an arduous task and a weighty burden. All who accept this burden, or have it imposed upon them, know how 32 NATUEAL QUALITIES NKCESSAET. heavj' it is, and what physical and mental Buffering is experienced until it is discharged. Timidity or hesitation will make a person inca- pahle of the duty ; and such will always recoil from the dangers of the situation. When, indeed, it is remembered, how little is required to disconcert and even paralyse the orator, — ^his own condition, bodily and moral, which is not always favourable at a given mo- ment, — that of the hearers so unstable and prone to vary never known, — ^the distraction« which may assail and divert him fi'om his sub- ject, — the failure perhaps of memory, so that a part of the plan, and occasionally its mait division, may be lost on the instant, — the inert- ness of the imagination, which may play him false, and bring feebly and confusedly to the mind what it represents, — the escape of an unlucky expression, — the not finding the pro- per term, — a sentence badly begim, out of which he no longer knows his way, — and finally, all the influences to which he is subjected, and which converge upon him fi-om a thousand eyes, •—when aU these things are borne in mind, it is truly enough to make a person lose head or heart, and the only wonder is that men can b« NATUBAL QUALITIES NECESSARY. 3S found who will face such dangers, and fling themselves into the midst of them. Nor, indeed, ought they to be courted save when duty urges, when your mission enjoins it, or in order to fulfil some obligation of conscience or of position. Any other motive — such as ambition, vainglory, or interest— exposes you to cruel miscalculations and well-merited down- falls. The strength of will needful to face such a situation is of course aided and sustained by a suitable preparation ; and, of aU preparations the best is to know well what you would say, and to have a clear conception of it. But yet, be- sides the possession of the idea and the chain of the thoughts on which you have a good hold, there is still the hazard of uttering appropriate or inappropriate words. Who is assured before- hand, that, on such a day, expressions will not prove rebellious to him, that the right phrase will come in the place appointed, and that language (like a sword) will not turn its edge? It is m the details of diction at the moment, or the instantaneous composition of the discourse and of sentences, that great decision is required to nelect words as they fly past, to control them D 34r NATUEAL QUALITIES NECESSAET. immediately, and, amidst many unsuitable, te allow none but what are suitable to drop from the lips. Moreover, a certain boldness ia required, — and who knows whether it will always be a successM boldness ? — to begin the development of any sudden idea, without know- ing whither it wiU lead you — ^to obey some oratorical inspiration which may carry you far away from the subject, and finaEy, to enter, and to jump, as it were, with both feet together, into a sentence, the issue of which you cannot foresee, particularly in French, which has only one possible class of terminations to its periods. Nevertheless, when once you have begun, you must rigidly beware of retreating by any break in the thought or in the sentence. You must go on daringly to the end, even though you take refuge in some unauthorised turn of expression or some incorrectness of language. Timid minds are frightened from adopting these extreme resources; for which reason we affirm that to expose oneself to this hazard, — and whoever extemporises does so, — decision and even a little rashness of will are neces- Bary, beforehand and during the process, in order to sustain it, to undergo all without faint- JfATUJlAL QUAUTIES NEOE88AKT. 35 iug, and to reach the destination without a serious Vound, or, at all events, without a ML § 6. — Mepansiveness of Character. There are two sorts of expansiveness, that of the mind and that of the heart. The mind seeks after truth, which is its natural object. Now truth is like light, or rather, it w the Eght of the intelligence ; and this is why it ia diflfusive by its very nature, and spontaneously enters wherever an avenue is opened to it. When, therefore, we perceive or think that we perceive a truth, the mind rejoices in and feeds upon it, because it is its natural ali- ment; in assimilating and appropriating it, the mind partakes of its expansive force, and expe- riences the desire of announcing to others what it knows itself, and of making them see what it sees. It is its happiness to become a torch of this light, and to help in difiPiising it. It sometimes even glories in the joy ''t feels; the pride also of enlightening our fellows, and so of ruling them to a certain extent, and of fleeming above them, is part of the feeling. A d2 36 NATUBAL QUALITIES NE0ES8AKT. keen and intelligent mind, which seeks truth, seizes it quickly and conceives it clearly, il more eager than another to communicate what it knows; and if, along with this, such a mind loves glory, — and who loves it not, at least in youth? — it will be impelled the more towards public speaking, and more capable of exercising the power of eloquence. But there is, besides, a certain disposition of character and heart which contributes much to the same result, as is seen in women and children, who speak willingly and with great ease, on account of their more impressionable sensibility, the dehcacy of their organs, and their extreme mobility. Something of this is required in the extemporiser. A self-centred person, who reflects a great deal and meditates long before he can perceive a truth or seize an analogy, and who either cannot or will not manifest what he feels or thinks until he has exactly shaped the expression of it, is not fitted for extemporaneous speaking. A melancholy, morose, misanthropic person, who shuns society, dreads the intercourse of men, and delights in solitary musing, will have a difficulty in speaking in public ; he has not the taste for it, as f hit NATURAL QUALITIBS NECESSAKr. 37 aature ia against it. What is needed for this art, with a quick mind, is an open, confiding, and cheerlul character, which loves men and takes pleasure ia joining itself to others. Mis« trust shuts the heart, the mind, and the mouth. This expansiveness of character, which ia favourable to extemporaneous speaking, has cer- tainly its disadvantages also. It sometimes gives to the mind an unsettled levity and too much recklessness, and something ventm-esome or superficial to the style. But these disadvan- tages may be lessened or neutralized by a serious preparation, by a weU-considered and well- defined plan, which wiU sustain and direct the exuberance of language, and remove by previous reflection the chances of digressiveness and in consequence. § 1. — Instinctive or natural Gift of Speaking. Art may develope, and perfect the talent of a speaker, but cannot produce it. The exer- cises of grammar and of rhetoric will teach a person how to speak correctly and elegantly ; but nothing can teach him to be eloquent, or give that eloquence which comes from the heart and goes to the heart. All the precepts and arti« 58 NATCBAIi QCALITLES NECE88AET. fices on earth can but form the appearances 07 semblance of it. Now this true and natural eloquence -which moves, persuades, and tran- sports, consists 01 a soul and a body, like man, whose image, glory, and word it is. The soul of eloquence is the centre of the human soul itself, which, enlightened by the rays of an idea, or warmed and stirred by an impression, flashes or bursts forth to manifest, by some sign or other, what it feels or sees. This it is which gives movement and life to a discourse ; it is like a kindled torch, or a shud- dering and vibrating nerve. The body of eloquence is the language which it requires in order to speak, and which must harmoniously clothe what it thinka or feels, as a fine shape harmonizes with the spirit which it contains. The material part of language is learnt instinctively, and practice makes us feel and seize its delicacies and shades. The understanding then, which sees rightly and conceives clearly, and the heart which feels keenly, find naturally, and without effort, the words and the arrangement of wordii most analogous to what is to be expressed. Hence the innate talent of eloquence, whicb HATUEAL QUALITIES NEOESSARI. 39 results alike from certain intellectual and moral aptitudes, and from the physical consti- tution, especially from that of the senses and of the organs of the voice. There are men organized to speak well as there are birds organized to sing well, bees to make honey, and beavers to buUd. Doubtless, all men are capable of speaking, since they are rational beings, and the exercise of reason is impossible without speech ; beyond all doubt, moreover, any man may become momentarily eloquent, being suddenly illumi- nated by an idea, by some passing inspiration, or the vehement impulse of a feeling, or a desire; bursts also and cries of passion are often of a high kind of eloquence. But it is the eifect of an instant, which passes away with the imusual circumstances which have produced it; during the rest of their lives these same persons may speak very ill, and be incapable of pronouncing a sentence in public. They have not the gift of words, and those alone who are endowed with it by nature, can derive advantage from the advice we offer in order to turn this precious talent to account Id the service of truth and justice. d4 40 NATUKAL QUALITIES NECESSAEr. It is with eloquence as with all art ; tc succeed in it you must be made for it, or cabled to it incessantly, and in a manner almost un- conquerable, by a mysterious tendency or in- explicable attraction, which influences the whole being, which ultimately turns to its object, as the magnetic needle to the north. At the root of all arts, so various in their expression, there is something in common to them all — ■ namely, the life of the soul, the life of the mind, which feels the want of dififusing, mani- festing, and multiplying itself; each individual also has something peculiar and original, by which he is impelled, on account of his special organisation, or constitution of mind and body, to reproduce his mental life in such or such a way, by such or such means, or in such or Buch a mateiial form. Hence the boundless diversity of the arts and of theii productions. Speech is certainly the noblest and most powerful of the arts : first, because by its nature, it is nearest to the intelligence whose ideas it alone perfectly expresses; secondly, in consequence of the higher purity, the more exquisite delicacy of its means of expression, being the least gross of any, holding on to WATtJBAL QUALITIES NECE88AEY. 41 eartli by nothing save a light breath; lastly, on account of its great directness of action, so powerful over the mind, making it conceive things, comprehend thought, and grasp the truth. In order, then, to exercise with success the art of speaking, — or to speak eloquently, — ^it b necessary to have a natural talent, which ia a gift of Heaven, and which all science with its precepts, and all earth's teaching with ite •zeroises, are unable to rapply. 42 ACQUIEED QOALITIKS OF MUJD. CHAP. m. BENTil. APTITUDES FOE PUBLIC SPEAKINQj CAPABLE OF BEIKG ACQUIEED, OB rOEMED B\ STUDY. The dispositions which can be acquired, of formed by study, come next aftei the natural aptitudes of the mind, and these will be the subject of this chapter. We give the name of acquired dispositions to certain aptitudes of mind, the germ of which is no doubt supplied by nature, but which may be called forth and developed in a remarkable manner by instruction, practice, and habit, whereas purely natural talent, although it also may be perfected by art, resembles, neverthe- less, to a certain extent, that instinct which attains its object at the iSrst ejGfbrt. It may even happen that a remarkable acquired ability, such, for instance, as the art of speaking rheto- rically, has but slight natural root, that is, but little real talent, producing nothing except bj. AOQUIEED QTTAilTIES OF MINT). 43 dint of art, practixje, and toil ; but if the natural root be absent, however beautiM tlie products may at first appear, people soon feel their artifi dal character and want of life. The acquired mental aptitudes are, the art or method of thinking and the art or method of faying. But before considering them, we wiU Bay a few words about the orator's fund or store of acquirements, which must not be confounded with acquired qualities. § 1. — Acquisitions or Fvmd needful to the Orator. The orator's capital is that sum of science or knowledge which is necessary to him in order to speak pertinently upon any subject what- ever ; and science or knowledge are not extern- poriaed. Although knowledge does not give the talent for speaking, still he who knows well what he has td say, has many chances of saying it well, especially if he has a clear and distinct conception of it. " What you conceive aright you express clearly ; And the words to say it in, come easily." It is an excellent preparation, then, for the iirt of speaking to study persevering^, — ^not 44 ACQUIEED QUALITIES OF MIND. merely the matter about which you hive to discourse — a thing always done before speaking in public, unless a person be presumptuous and demented, — but generally all those subjects which form part of a liberal education, and which constitute the usual instruction of men iatended for intellectual and moral professions. These were what were formerly termed classical studies, and they included grammar, rhetoric, logic, a certain portion of literature, history, mathematical and physical science, and rehgioua knowledge. These " classical studies " were per- fected and completed by the superior courses of the universities. To hare gone through a good educational career, or been distinguished at school, as it ia commonly expressed, is an immense advantage ; for it is ia childhood and youth that the greatest number of things are. learnt, and learnt best, in the sense, that knowledge acquired at that age is the most durable. It is more than this, it is ineffaceable, and constitutes an in- destructible fund, a sort of mental ground-work upon which is raised all other instruction and education ; and this fund, according to the manner in which it is placed in the mind ACQrriEED QUALITIES OF MIND. 45 determines the solidity and dimensions cf each person's intellectual and moral existence. It is impossible to estimate accurately tho influence of the first instruction ■vrhich a man receives : that influence depends upon the virtue of the words which instruct, and on the way thgy are received. It is a sort of fertilisation, the fruits of which are sometimes slow in ripening, and come forth late. As the life- giving action of instruction cannot be exercised except by words and the signs of language, the form often overlies the spirit, and many retain scarcely more than the letter or the words, which they reproduce from memory with great facility. The larger part of infantine successes and collegiate glories consist of this. Others, on the contrary; deeply smitten with the spirit of what is said, early conceive ideas of a fertile kind destined to become the parent ideas of all their future thoughts. The more im- pressed and absorbed their mind is interiorly, the less vivid, the less brilliant it appears ex- teriorly. It carries within it confusedly ideas which are too great for what contains them, and of which it cannot yet render to itsey an xjcount ; and it is only afterwards, when i} 16 AOQTJIEED QTTALirrES OF MKTD. haa capacity and time for reflection, that it knows how to recognise, turn to advantage, and bring forth to the hght, the treasures buried within. Hence two kinds of fund or of intellectual wealth, the fruit of instruction, and derived from the manner in which it has been given and received. 1. A collection of words, expressions, images, facts, superficial thoughts, common places, — things commonly received and already dis- cussed; whatever, in a word, strikes the senses, excites the imagination, and easily impresses itself upon the memory. It is not to be denied that this intellectual baggage, however light, accumulated during many years, and arranged with a certain degree of order, may be of some service towards speaking with facility on some occasions, but then like a rhetorician ; that is, composing on the instant a sort of discom-se or harangue more or less elegant, wherein there may be certain happy expressions but few ideas, and which may yet afford a transient pleasure to the listener, without moving or instructing him. In many circumstances, dift courses of tliis class are in keeping; they a1 ACQUIRED QUALITIES OF MIND. 41 least suffice. It is a part played in a given Bitaation, a portion of the programme per formed, and it is assuredly an advantage not to be despised to acquit oneself of it with honour or even without discredit. 2. But the real fund is in ideas, not in phrases, in the succession or connexion of the thoughts, and not in a series of facts or images. He who has laid in a store in this manner is not so ready at a speech, because there is within him a veritable thought with which his spirit strives in order to master, possess, and manifest it, so soon as he shall have thoroughly entered into it ; such a man speaks not merely from memory or imagination, only and always with a labour of the understanding, and then what he produces is something with life in it and capable of inspiring life — ^and this is just what distinguishes the orator from the rhetorician. The latter may charm by his language, but he imparts no life ; and thus nothing is produced in the mind of the hearer. It is pleasant music which delights the ear for a moment, and leaves nothing behind it. Vox et prwterea nihU. 48 AOQUniKD QUALniKB OF MINI>. The former raises np a now sot of ol.jects in the hearer's mind, producing tlicrein foolings, BfFoctions, emotions, ideas; he renews it, tr:xns- forms it, and turns it into a likeness of himself; and as the Almighty created all things by His word, so the true orator animates those who understand him by his, and makes them live with his own intellectual life. But in this, as m all things, it is only by a Divine virtue that life is transmitted. The sacred fire which warms the bosom of the orator is inspi- ration from on high : pectus est quod disertum facit. Without this life-giving fire, the finest phrases that can be put together are but sound- ing brass and tinkling symbols. The fund to be amassed, therefore, by those who intend to speak in public, is a treasury of ideas, thoughts, and principles of knowledge, strongly conceived, firmly linked together, carefully wi'ought out, in such a way that, throughout all this diversity of study, the mind, 80 far as may be, shall admit nothing save what it thoroughly comprehends, or at least has made its own to a certain extent, by meditation. Thus, knowledge becomes strangely melted down, not cmnbersome to the undorsliinling; AOQUIKED QUALITIES OF MIND. 49 and not overburdeniug the memory. It is the essence of things reduced to their simplest ex- pression, and comprising all their concentrated virtue. It is the di-op of oil extracted firom thousands of roses, and fraught with their accu- mulated odours; the healing power of a hun- dred-weight of bark in a few grains of quinine. In a word, it is the idea in its intellectuality, and metaphysical purity, compared to the mul tiplidty of Ikcts and images from which it has been extracted, and of which it is the law. This point is not well enough understood in our day, when material things are made para- mount, and the spirit is postponed to the letter — ^to such a degree indeed that even in instrua tion, and in spiritual or mental things, no less than in all else, quantity is considered more than quality. Under the specious pretext of preparing men betimes for their future profession ia society, and of making them what ai'e called speoiai men, their attention is directed from the tender- ost age to phenomena, which occupy the senses iind the imagination without exciting thought ; and above all, without recalling the mind home '•o itself, in order to teach it self-knowledge, E 50 acqtheed quaiities of mind. self-direction, and self-possession, — worth, aft Buredly, the knowledge or possession of every- thing else. Instruction is materialised to the utmost ; and in the same degree education is eensualised. It is driven headlong into that path which is the acknowledged reproach of contemporary art, — ^not nature and truth, but naturalism and realism. People care no longer for any but positive, or, as it is styled, pro- fessional instruction, — that is, such as may directly serve to earn the bread of this world. Men are trained for the one end of turning this earth to account, and securing in it a comfortable position. It is forgotten that the true man, like thought, is an idea even more than a body or a letter, and that the body and the letter have no value except from the idea which animates him, and which he should express. The ideal is dreaded now-a-days, Or rather it is not understood, it is no longer appreciated, because our views are absorbed by the real, and the pleasures of the body are more sought after than those of the mind. For this reason the natural and phyBica!i sciences, which make matter their study, with mathematics as their handroAidens, bcausc AOQUIBED QTTAirriES OF MIND. 5] they measure the finite, are so much hououred in our day. In these pursuits ev3rything if positive — matter, form, letter, number, weight, and measure; and as the end of these studies is the amelioration, or at least the embellish- ment of earthly life, the multitude rushes readily in this direction, and the mind becomes the servant, or rather the slave of the body. Every Gcience, at present, which is not directly or indirectly subservient to some material want or enjoyment, — that is, to something positive, as the saying is, — falls into contempt and opnrobrium, or is at least abandoned. Philosophy furnishes a melan- choly example. True, it has well deserved this fate by its excess and extravagance in recent times ; and the same will invariably befall it, whenever it effects independence, and refuses fealty to Divine authority. It is the same with literature, the fine arts, and whatever promotes the civilization of men and the triumph of the Divine principle made after the image of God, over the brute formed after the image of the world. AU these noble ol)jects are abandoned as useless, or of little importance to the wants and happir«s8 of 52 ACQDIKED QUALITIEB OF MINU actual society. Religion has alone sui'\ived, thanks to her unchangeable teaching and her Divine origin, which place her above hum in in Btitutions and the vicissitudes of earth. But for the Rock of the Divine Word, but for the Divine foundation-stone, on which she is built, she also, under pretence of rendering her more useful or more positive, more suited to the wants and lights of the age, would have been lowered and materialised, then the last link which binds humanity to heaven would have been broken, and the spiritual man would have been whoUy interred in the slough of this world, buried in sensuality. Let but one glance be given at what has been the fate of Religion and its Divine authority, m some instances and a notion wiU be gained of the degradation from which Religion still pre- serves the human race. She is the last refiige of freedom and dignity of the mind against material force. Everywhere else, religious in- struction, without faith and without fixed rule, is at the mercy of human science, and therefore of the world's power, which makes that scienca the instrument of its own predominance. I crave forgiveness for this disgression which ACQUIEED QDALITIES OF MIND. 53 has escaped from a heart deeply saddened a< the loweiing of our system of stucies suaa the decline of our education, which -will lead to a new species of barbarism in this age of ours. I return to my subject, that is, to the fund which he who wishes to speak in public should form within himself; and I say to the young who may read me, — ^if, indeed, they wiU read me at all — I say, at least to those who may feel themselves impelled to the noble exercise of eloquence : " My young fiiends, before speak- mg, endeavoui- to know what you have to say, and for this, study — study well. Obtain by perseverance an acquaintance first with all that relates to classical learning ; and then let each laboui" ardently in the department to which his vocation urges him. Whatever you study, do so solidly and conscientiously. Bend your wholo mind to the object you seek to know, and let it not go tin you have entered into, mastered, and grasped it, so as to comprehend it, to con- ceive it within yourselves, to possess the full idea of it, and to be able to give an account of it to yourselves and others. There is but one time for acqiurement, the time of youtti, £3 64 ACQTTIRED yUAXITIES OF MUTD. Bees gather in the flower season only ; they afterwards live upon their wax ani honey. In youth all the faculties are wondrously adapted to receive and retain, and the mind eagerly welcomes what comes from without. It is now that supplies should be laid in, the harvest gathered, and stored in the garner. Later comes the threshing of the sheaves, and the severing of the grain from the straw, — the grinding, the fonnation of pure flour, the kneading of it, and the making of bread. But there would be neither bread, nor flour, nor grain, if there had been no reaping, — and what can be reaped if the seed has not been cast, nor the ground opened and prepared ? Sow, then, the field of your mind as much as possible, tU] it, and moisten it with your sweat, that the good seed may bear fruit, and use the sickle cou- rageously in the heat of the day, in order to fill the storehouse of your understanding. Then when you shall have to feed a famishing people with the bread of eloquence, you will have in hand rich ears to beat, and generous grain yielding pure substance ; fi-om this substance, kneaded in your mind with a little leaven 'J'om on high, impart,ing to it a divine fep AOQiriEED QtJAI/ITIBB OF MIOT). 68 mentation, you may form intellectual bread full of flavour and solidity, whicli will giva your audience the nourishment of mind and soul, even as bread gives aliment to the body." § 2. — To know how to speak, you must first know how to think. We now come to the acquired qualities pro- perly so called, that is, to the art of thinking, and the method of expressing what is thought which may be learnt by study and formed by well-directed practice. Although we think by nature, yet is there an art of thinking which teaches us to do with greater ease and certainty what our nature, as rational beings, leads us to do spontaneously. In all that man voluntarily does, Uberty has its own share ; and liberty, which nowhere (Bxists without intelligence, is ever the source of pro- gress and perfection. Man learns how to think as he learns how to speak, read, write, and sing, to move his body gracefully, and to use all the powers of mind and body. Logic teaches the art of thinking. The orator therefore must be a good logician ; not k4 51) AOQtriEED QUALrriBS OF MIND. alone theoretically, but practically. It is not his business to know how to declaim about the origin and formation of ideas, nor about the four operations of thought. It is not the method of teaching, but the use of logic which he requires, — and a prompt and dex- terous familiarity with it he will not acquire except by long and repeated exercises, undftr the guidance of an exjjerienced thinker, an artist of thought, who will teach him how to do with ease what he knows how to do already of him- self imperfectly. We, in this point of view, somewhat regret the disuse of the old syllogistic method of the schools ; for we are convinced that, properly applied and seriously directed, it gives quick ness, subtilty, clearness, and something sur» and firm to the mind, rarely found in the thinkers of the present day. The fault for- merly, perhaps, was in the excessiveness of the dialectical turn, and frequently the style became spoilt by dryness, heaviness, and an appearance of pedantry. Still, men knew how to state a question, and how to treat it : they knew at which end to begin it in orler t« develope and solve it; and the line of the argu ACQUIEED QtrALITTES OF MIND. 57 ment, distinctly marked out, led straight ta the object and to a conclusion. The fault now-a-days is in an absence or deficiency of method. People remain a long time before their subject without knowing how to begin it, even though they rightly understand its very terms. This superinduces iaterminable prepa- rations, desultory introductions, a coniused ex- position, a disorderly development, and finally no conclusion, or at least nothing decisive. There are really few men in our day who know how to think, that is, how to lay down and develope a subject in such a way as to instruct and interest those who read them or listen to them. A horror is everywhere t'elt for rules or for what imposes constraint, vnd, as nearly aU the barriers have been re- noved which supported and protected human activity by obliging it to exert itself within fixed lines, liberty has become disorder, mei> swerve from the track in order to walk at their ease; and, far fi:om gaining by it, they lose great part of their time and their strength in seeking a path which would have been shown them from the outset had they chosen to accept of discipline, and to allow thomselves to be 68 ACJQtriEED QTJAIilTIES OF MIKD. guided. In order to think in their own feshion, or be original, they think at random, just as ideas happen to come, if any come ; and the upshot, for the most part, is vagueness, oddity, and confusion. This is the era of the vague and the aknost. Everybody wants to speak of everything, as everybody wants to interfere in everything ; and the result is that amidst this flood of thoughts, this overflow of divergent or irreconcilable words and actions, the minds of men, tossed to and fro, float uncertain, without a notion where they are going, just as the wind blows or the current drives. I would have, then, persons who are intended for public speaking, follow a course of logic, rather practical than theoretic, in which the mind should be vigorously trained to the divi- sion and combination of ideas upon interesting and instructive topics. These exercises should be written or oral. Sometimes it should be a dissertation on a point of literature, morals, or history ; and a habit shoiild be acquired of composing with order and method, by point- ing out, in proportion as the student proceeded, the several parts of the discourse, the steps of the development, and means of proof — in s ACQUIEED QUALITIES 05 MIND. 69 word, whatever serves to treat a subject suitably Sometimes it should be a discussion between several debaters, with the whole apparatus and strict rules of a dialectic argument, under the master's direction ; the disputants should not be allowed to proceed or conclude without re- ducing their thoughts to the forms of syllogistic reasoning, — a process which entails some length- iness, and even heaviness upon the discourse, but it gives greater clearness, order, and cer- tainty. At other times, the debate might be extemporaneous, and then, in the unforeseen character of the discussion and in all the sparks of intelligence which it strikes forth, will be seen the minds which are distinguished, the minds that know how to take possession of an idea at once, enter into it, divide, and expound it. There should, for every position or thesis, be the counter-position or antithesis, and some one to maintain it ; for in every subject there are reasons for and against. Thus would the student leam to look at things in various lights, and not to allow himself to be absorbed by one point of view, or by a pre- conceived opinion. But these gymnastics of thinking ougHt to be led by an intelligent mas 60 ACUIIIEKD QUALITIES OF MIND. ter, who suffers not himself to be swayed 6j fomis or enslaved by routine. Real thinking must be effected under all these forms of dis- putation and argument, but the letter must not kill the spirit, as frequently was the case in tha schools of antiquity. For then it would no Jonger be anything but an affair of memory, and the life of intelligence would die away. I am convinced, — and I have made the experi- ment for a length of years in the Faculty of Strasbourg, where I had established those ex- ercises, which proved exceedingly usefiil, — 1 am convinced that young men, who thus occu- pied themselves during a year or two ia turn- ing over and handling a variety of questions, in stu-ring up a multiphcity of ideas, and who should, with a view to this, wiite and speak a great deal, always with order, with method, and under good guidance, would become able thinkers ; and, if endowed with high intelli- gence, would become men mighty in word or in deed, or in both together, according to theii capacity, character and nature. AOQUIEED QUALITIES OF MIND. 61 g 3. — Tluit Good Speaking may be learnt, afid how. However, it is not enough to think methoi dically, in order to speak well, although this be a great step towards it ; to express or say what is thought is also necessary; in other words, form must be added to the substance. We must learn then how to speak as well as how to think well. Plere, again, practice surpasses theory, and daily exercise is worth more than precepts. Rhetoric teaches the art of language ; that is, of speaking or writing elegantly, while grammar shows how to do so with correctness. It is clear that before anything else, the rules of language must be known and observed; but correctness gives neither elegance nor grace, which are the most requisite qualities of the orator. How are they then to be acquired ? In the first place there is what cannot be acquired — a natural fund, which nature alone can give. Women are remarkable for it. The gracefulness ■with which nature has endowed them, diffuses itself generally into their Ian guage ; and some speak, and even write, admi S2 ACQUIRED QTIALinES OF MIND. rably, without any study ; under the sole m Bpiration of feeling or passion. Credit, indeed, must be given to the medium in which they are placed, and the society in which they live, constituting a moral atmosphere in which their very impressionable and open minds — ^unless wil- fully closed — absorb all influences with avidity, and receive a kind of spontaneous culture and education. As plants, which bear in their germs the hidden treasures of the most brilliant and odoriferous flowers, inhale from the ground where they are fixed, and the air which encom- passes them, the coarsest juices and the subtilest fluids, which they marvellously transform by assimilation; so these delicate souls absorb into themselves all they come in contact with, all that impresses or nourishes them; which they mani- fest by a soft radiation, by a gracefiil efliorescence in their movements, actions, words, and what- ever emanates from their persons. Women naturally speak better than men. They express themselves more easDy, more vividly ; with more arch simplicity, because they feel more rapidly and more delicately. Hence the loquacity with which they arc re- preached, and which is an effect of theii ACQUIEEI^ QUALITIES OF MIND. 63 eonstitution and teniperament. Hence there are so many women who write in an admi- rable and remarkable manner, although thej have studied neither rhetoric nor logic, and even without knowing grammar or orthography. They write as they speak; they speak prettj much as the birds sing, — and their language has the same charm. Add to this the sweetness of their organ, the flexibility of their voice, the variety of their intonations, according to the feeling which animates them; the mobility of their physiognomy, which greatly increases the effect of words, the picturesqueness of their gestures, and in short the gracefulness of their whole exterior: thus, although not destined for orators by their sex or social position, they have all the power of the orator, and all his success, in their sphere, and in the circle of their activity. For none better know how to touch, persuade, and influence, which, I think, is the end and the perfection of eloquence. Men, then, who wish to acquire the art of Bpeakirig, must learn by study what most women do naturally; and in this respect thos* whose temperament most approaches the femi nine, in greater sensibility, and livelier im 64 iCXJUIEKD QUAUTIES OF MnTD. presdonableness, will have less diffienlty tha* others, and will succeed better. However, as the man who speaks in public has to express lodder ideas, general notions, and deeper or more extensive combinations, which imply depth, — ^penetration of mind, and reflec- tive power, — qualities very scarce among women, — he will never be able to expound these subjects, the result of abstraction and meditation, with grace of feeling and easing of language spontaneously, and by nature. Here art must supply what nature refuses; by dili- gent labor, by exercises nmltiplied without end, the diction must be rendered pliable, the speech disciplined, and broken in, that h. may become an amenable instrument which, obe- dient to the least touch of the will, and lightest challenge of thought, will iumish instantly a copious style, seeming to flow spontaneously, the result nevertheless of the subtUest art ; like fountains which, with great cost and magnifi- cence, carry the waters of our rivers into our squares, yet appear t6 pour forth naturally. Thus the words of the orator, by dint of toil and of art, and this even on the most abstract subjects, ought to attain a limpid and an eaay ACQUIEED QUA^JTIES OF MIND. 65 dow, with which he hardly troubles himself but to which his attention is all the time directed, in order to bring to aght the ideaa m his mind) the images in his fancy, and the emotions of his heart. Such is the talent to be acquired! ^t fabricando faher, says the adage; and it is the same with the journeyman of words, and forger of eloquence. The iron mxist be often beaten, especially whUe it is hot, to give it shape ; so must we continually hammer language to be- come masters of it, and to fashion it, if we would become cabable of speaking in public. It is not enough to learn the rules of style, the tropes and figures of rhetoric; the use and proper application of them must be known ; and this cannot be learnt except by much peaking and much writing under the direction of an able master, who knows how to write and speak himself; for in this both precept and example are necessary, and example is better than precept. He who has a capacity for public speaking will learn it best by listening to those who know how to speak weD, and he will make more progress by striving to imitate them than by aU their instructions: as the young birda F *6 ACf^ ACQUrRED QUALITIES OF MIND. 75 of which youth ia capable. It is the easiest training of thought by and through words, its material signs. A youth is thus taught for several years to learn the connexions of ideas by the relations of words, which he is continually fashioning and re-fashioning ; and while learning to form sentences, ever with a thought in view, the details of which he must explain and convey, he becomes used to analysis and combination, and executes, in the humble functions of gi-ammar, a prelude to the highest operations of science, which, after all, are but the decoinposition and mar- shalling of 'ideas. Who does not at once see what facility the mind acquires by this perpetual comparison of the terms and idioms of two languages, which must be made to fit each other, and to what a degree thought becomes refined and BubtUe, in the presence of some idea which has to be expressed? the phrases of two lan- guages are measured and weighed incessantly ; they are compared, each with each, and each with the idea, to ascertain whicfc wiU rendtr it best. The efforts are not useless which arc mad« /6 ACQUIRED QUALirrEB OF MIND. by these youtliful minds wlio thus, day afte» day, wrestle with the thoughts of the most illustrious writers of antiquity, in order to un- derstand and translate them. How great a privilege to commune daily with the exalted reason, the noble ideas, and the splendid diction of those great and noble minds ! How great the advantage derived from such an intercouj'se, and how great the intellectual gain in such a company, and daily familiarity ! Then what a pleasure to have found an equivalent term, and to have transferred into one's own language, witt the same vigour or the same delicacy, what some famous author has said in his ! What profit in this concussion of idioms, from which the spark of ideas is so often striken forth, — this strife, unequal indeed, yet replete with a noble emulation, between a youth, trying the nascent strength of his thoughts, and some master mind whose works enlighten and guide hu- manity ! And finally, what more particularly concerns our subject, what facility of expre»- lion, what aptitude for extemporaneous speak- ing, must noc accrue from this habit, contracted from childhood, of handling and tumiag a sentence in every direction, untU the most ACQTJIEED QUALITIES OF MIND. 71 perfect form be found, of combining its terms in all ways, in order to arrive at the arrange ment best fitted for the manifestation of the thought, of polishing each member of it bj effacing asperities and smoothing crevices, of balancing one sentence against another, in order to give the whole oneness, measure, harmony, and a sort of music, rendering it as agreeable to the ear when spoken, as it is luminous to the mind by which it is meditated. No ; in no other way can the artist of words be ever formed; and if a different method be attempted, as is somewhat signified at present, you will have, not artists, but handicraftsmen. Means should always be proportioned to ends. If you want orators, you must teach them how to speak, and yon will not teach them otherwise than they have been taught heretofore. All our (French) great orators of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries have been formed in this manner, and I am not aware that tliere have ever been greater writers in the world, or that the glory of Fi-ance in this partic ilar has been excelled. Let this splendour of civi^isa- fcion, this blooming forth of the mind in poetry, literature, and eloquence, which have aiwayf 'S ACQtriKKD QDALITIKS OP MIND. been the brightest crown and most beaiitiful garland of humanity on earth, be once aban doned, in favour of conquest, and of the riches produced by industry and commerce, — ^which arc much to be admired, no doubt, but, after all, minister more to body than to soul, — be it BO ; we shall perhaps become more learned in material things, and certainly more wealthy ; we shall have more ways of winning money and of losing it, more ways of enjoying earthly life, and therefore of weai-ing out, and perchance of degrading it : but shall we be the happier? This is not certain. Shall we bo the better? — ^less certain still; but what is certain, is, that the life of human society or oivDization, however gilt, will be less beautiful, less noble, and less glorious. There is another practice which strikingly conduces towards facilitating expression and towards perfecting its form ; we mean the learning by heart of the finest passages in great writers, and especially in the most musical poets, so as to be able to recite them at a single eflfort, at moments of leisure, during a solitary walk for instance, when the mind so readilj wanders. This practice, adopted in all schools. ALHiLTK:oc-ived fix^m natnrv? the artistic power, caimot form within him tliat mould save with the assistance of the ffreat masters and bv imitatin" them. Geuius alone is an exception to tMs rule, and gaiiiis is rare. The best ihetoiical professors, those who ar«j veritably artists of speech, and seek to &shion others to their own likeness, recommend and adopt this exercise largely ; it is irksome to the mdolent. but it amply indemnifies the toil which it exac^ by the firuits which it brings. There is, K^sides. s way of alle\-iating the irouHe of it, smi that is. to read and learn select pages of our great authors, while stroll- mg under the shades of a garden or through some rich country, when nature is in all her futilliancy. Yon may then recite them aloud in gadi beautiful scenery, the impressions of which delioioasly blend with those of eloquence and song. Every yonng man of any talent or literary t^iste has made the experiment. During the spring time of life, there is a sin- gular oh.arm for us in the spring time of nature ; and tiie redundance of firesh life in a youthful Boui tryiKir its own powers in thought, in paintinc, c ii. poesy, is ma-veUousiy and h» G 82 AOQUIBED QUALITIES OF MIMD. stinctively wooed into symiiathy '■vith that glorious life of the world around, whose ferti' Using virtue evokes his genius, while it iinohants his senses by the subtilest emotions, and enriches his imagination with varied pictures and biilliant hues. Moreover, — and this is a privilege of youth, which has its advantages as well as its incon- veniences, — poetry and eloquence are novc» better relished, that is, never with greater delight and love, than at this age, in the dawn of the soul's life, amidst the first fruits of the imagination and the heart's innocence, in the opening splendours of the ideal, which seems to the understanding as a rising sun, tinging and illumining all things with its radiant fires. The beauty that is understood and that which is merely sensible wondrously harmonise, they give each other enchantment and relief; or, to speak more truly, material beauty is appreciated only through the reflected light of mental beauty, and as the rays emitted by an idea illuminate and transfigure nature's forms and nature's life, — so nature, on the other hand, while it lovingly receives the lustre of soma heavenly thought, refracts it gloriously in iti ACQDIKEU lilTALrmS OF MINP. S3 prisms, and multiplies, while reflectiiig its l>eams. All this tlie ytutkfiil orator, or he who ha« the powei- to become one, will feel and es- perience, each person according to his nature and his character, :is he awakens the echoes of some beautiful scene with the finest accents of human eloquence or poetry. While impressing these more deeply in his memory, by help of the spots wherein he learns them, which will add to and thereafter fiicilitate his recoUootious, he will imbibe unconsciously a twofold life, the purest and sublimest life of himiauity, and that great life of nature which is the thought of the Almighty diffused throughout creation. Tliese two great lives, that of man and that of nature, which spring from the same source, and thithor return, blended without beuig con- founded within him, animatiug and nourishing his own life, the life of his luiud and of his soul, will yet draw forth from his bosom, from his poet's or orator's heart, a stream of eloquence or of song which will run an miperiababie touise H* PKIBIOAL ACQUIB£U QITAIJTIBS CHAP. IV, PHYSICAL QUAUTIES OF THE OBATOB, NAITJEAL ANT) ACQUIBED. Ii is not enough, for the orator to have idea* and to know how to express them, imparting the most gi-aceful turn to his diction, and pour- ing forth copious words into the form of a musical and sonorous period; he must further know how to articulate his speech, how to pro- nounce and deliver his discourse. He must have propriety of voice and gesture, or the oratorical action, — a thing of immense im- portance to the success of eloquence, in which nature, as in everything, has a consi- derable share, but art may play a great part. Here, then, also is to be developed a natural predisposition, and a certain skill is to b« «3qiured. PUTSICAL ACQUUUai QCAUTIKS. 8J § l.~The Voice. The voice, inclvuUng all the organs whiok stn-ve to produce or modify it, is the speaker^ ehief instrument; and its quality ossontially depends, in the first instance, upon the tbrma- tiou of the chest, tlie throat, and mouth. Art can do little to ainolionuo tliis formation, but it can do much to iaciliUrte ami strengthen tho organic moveii\ents in all that regivnls breatliiusi, tho emission of sound, tmd pro- nunciation. Those mattoi-s ought to be the object of a speeial duty. It is very imj>ortaut, in speaking as m sing- ing, to know how to send forth and how to hi^band the breath, so as to spin lengthened BOimds and dolivor a complete period, without being blown, tuid without brcjvking a seutouot' already begun, or a rush of deoltunation by a ga:?p, — needful, indeed, for hmgs that havt fiuied, but m.okiug a sort of disagreeable gap or stoppage. Care should also be taken not to speaK too ^t', too loud, or with too mncli animation at the outset ; for if you force your voice in the begimiing you are presently out of bi-eath, or 8 3 R6 PHYSICAL ACQUIRED QTJALITrES. your voice is cracked or hoarse, and then job fan no longer proceed without repeated efforts which fatigue the hearers and exhaust the speaker. All these precautions, which appear trivia], but which are really of high importance, are learned by labour, practice, and personal exi)erience. Still it is a very good thing to bo warned and guided by the experience of others, and this may be ensured advantageously by frequent recitations aloud under the direction of some master of elocution. Enough stress is not laid on these things, i^ indeed, they are attended to at aU, in the schools of rhetoric, in literary establishments, and in seminaries, — wherein orators, neverthe- less, are expected to be formed. Scarce any but actors now-a-days trouble themselves about them, and that is the reason we have so few men in the liberal professions who know how to speak, or even to read or recite a discourse rightly. On this point the ancients had a great advan- tnge over us ; they attached far more import- ance than we do to oratorical action, as we see iu the treatises of Cicero and Quintilian. It was with them one half of eloquence at tb« PHYSICAL ACQUIEED QUALITIES. 87 leant ; and it is said that Demosthenes made it t?ie orator's chief quality. They, perhaps, went too far in this respect ; and it came, doubtless, of their having to speak before the multitude, ▼hose senses must be struck, whose passions must be excited, and on -whom power and bril- liancy of voice have immense effect. As for us, we fall into the contrary extreme, and fre- quently our orators, even those most distin- guished in point of style, do not know how to speak their speeches. We are so unused to beauty of form and nobUity of air, that we an amazed when we meet them. There is a cer. tain orator of our day who owes his success and reputation merely to these advantages. On the other hand, these alone are too little; we miss much when a fine elocution and an elegant or splendid deliveiy, carry off common- place thoughts and expressions, more full of sound than of sense. This is quickly perceived in the perusal of those harangues which pro- duced so great an effect when delivered, and in which scarcely any of the emotions experienced in listening to them is recovered after they have •nee been fixed warm, as it were, on paper by oi 38 FHTBICAI. ACQCIKED QCAUnSB. tbe T^ertei^ art. The apdl of die ontxniol xcdaa is gone fixim them. The modnbtion rf the vmee pnxeeds pnBp cipolly fimi the la rym, tHndi frodnees ad modifies it ahnost vithoat findt, hj expen- 9an and eonbaetion. First, then, ve har* the tanastimi. of the brjaoL, viyi its nrasdes eartilagea^ manbianes, and braeerj, vhich are to the endaaoB of -voeai aomid vliat Ae mwo- hitions of the Inain praibaUf are^ itgtmma^ alh/j in the apenaiaem of thoi^it B^ in Ae cne caae as in the odter, die eoimexiaii of the oi^ans with the e^cb podneed entirety escapes as; and ahhcia^ we are eowtiwiially avaibig oaradres of the imtnu neBt, we do not ptaeeive in anj manner die homi t£ its miniAralinTi It is onty by nse, and expetimeBtB cAen TtsfobeA. that we leain to enqdoy them with greafeei ease and powo', and oar dkiD in this reqieet is wholly easfineA. Tlie researdies of the sabiilest anatomy hare g^ven as no £aeovery in die matter. AO that we 'haxe ascertained is^ that every vmee has its natmal hdttoM^ wlndk makes it a bass 'vmea, a taior, or a scqirana^ eadi with intermediate giadationK. The wddle vatoR, or tenor, is the most &ToaiaUe ft* rnvTiCAL aoqcteetj QrAunES. *»a epeakmg ; it I? that wMcfa maintains itself th« best, and which reac-he; the ferthen when weG articulated. It b al^j the most pieaidng, the most endearing, and has the largest resources ftir inflection, becaise, being in the middle of tiie scale, it rises or sinks with greater easp, and leans itself better to either hand. It there- fore commands a greater variety of intonations, wliich binders monotony of elocotion, and re- awakens the attention of the hearer, so prone to dose. TRie npper voice, exceedingly clear at first, is continnallr tending towards a scream. It harsheas as it proceeds, and at last becomes falsetto and nasaL It reqnires great talent, great KFeliness of thonght, langns^e, and elo- cotion to compensate or redeem this blende One of the most distinguished orators of our time is an example in point. He nsed to sac' ceed m obtaining a hearing for seyeral honrn together, in spite of his lank and creaking- voice, — a real victory oTmind over matter. A bass voice is with difficulty pitched high, and continnaUr tends back. Grave and ma- jestic at the outset, it soon grows heavy and vonotonoas; it has magnificent chords, bat, if 50 FHTSCil. AOQCIEED QTALHI^. joag Tia t ene d to, pri>iaees nequaitly tee e&et of a drme, and so-jn tires and Inlk to ^Leer by the medlej rf commiii^iDg' soands. Wh^ tbea. if it be ooai^e, violent, ntto^ed 'wi^ bursts ? Wliy, it crn5!:« the ear, if ii tlmnder? in too eraiSned an apartment ; and if it breaks &rth amidst £.3me rast nave, where edhoea almost alwsys exist, the billows (rf' s«j«nd re- rerbexadng fiom everr ade, Ueiid toge&eTy should the orator be ^peakin^ fist, and tLe result is a deafenng confi^on, ^mi s sort of acoosdc Aac-s. It is an advantage, then, to a speaks- to hare a middle Toiee, ance he has die greater play £>r expres2 folly, and to conceive thoroughly, what he has to unfold or to describe ; and then to say it with a S 102 l-HTSIOAL ACQUIEBD QUALITIES. all the sincerity and all the fervour of convic- tion or emotion. The fece will play its own part spontaneously; for, as the various move" ments of the countenance are produced of their own accord in the ratio of the feeling experi- enced, whenever you are really moved and under the influence of passion, the face naturally adapts the emotion of the words, as these that of the mind ; and art can be of little avail under these circumstances. Let us, in truth, not forget that the orator is not an actor, who plays a fictitious character by putting himself in another's position. He must, by dint of art, enter into the situation which he represents, and thus he has no means of becoming impressed or moved except by the study of his model, and the meditation of his part. He must, accordingly, compose his voice as well as his countenance, and it requires great cleverness ana long habit to imitate by the in- flexions of the voice, and the play of the phy- siognomy, the true and spontaneous feeling of nature The actor, in a word, is obliged to grimace morally as well as physically; and on this account, even when most successful, when most seeming to feel what le impep PHYSICAL ACQUIEED tStJALiaXES. 103 tonates, as he in general feels it not, something of this is perceptible; and it is the most con« Bummate actor's fate, that, through a certain illusion of the imagination, his acting is nevei more than a grimace. Hence the vice, and hence the disfavour of that profession, notwith- standing all the talent and study which it re- qukes; there is always somethiag disingenuous in saying what you do not think, in manifesting sentiments which are not your own. The orator, on the contrary, unless he chooses to become the advocate of falsehood, is always with the truth. He must feel and think what- ever he says, and consequently he may allow his face and his eyes to speak for themselves. As soon as his soul is moved, and becomes fervid, it will find immediate expression in his coim- tenance and in his whole person, and the more natural and spontaneous is the play of his phy- siognomy, the more eifect it wiU produce. It is not the same, or not to the same degree, with regard to the movements of the body and to gesticulation. The body, indeed, and litnbs of -he speaker, animated by a soul expressing tself fervidly, will represent nat jraUy to a b4 104 PHTSICAI, ACQTrrRED QUAXiriES. certain degree, by their outward movciQcnti the inward movements of the mind. Sut the machinery, if I may say bo, is more complicated, heavier, and more cumhersome, because matter predominates here ; it is not easy to move without awkwardness and elegantly the whole bulk of the body, and particularly the arms: which are the most mobile organs, and those most in sight. How many have a tolerably good notion of speaking, and cannot move their arms and hands properly, or have postures of head and attitudes which are at once ungracefiil and at variance with their words. It is in this department of action that speakers most betray their inexperience and embarrassment; and, at the same time, the clumsiness or inappropriate- ness of the gestures ; the puerility or affectation of the attitudes used, are enough to spoil tho best speech's effect. Efforts are worth maldng, then, to acquire beforehand good habits in this respect, in order that the body, trained with deliberation to impulse of the words, and to adapt itself to their inspiration, may execute of its own accord, and gracefully, the most expressive movements, may itself take the most appropriate attitudes, PHYSICAL ACQUnsKD QUALITIES. 105 and not have its Kmbs working ineffectually or untowardly, with the arms motionless and tied down to the figure, or the hands nailed to the palpit or the platform balustrade. An abrupt or jerky gesticulation is specially to be avoided, Buch as a regular swing up and down, down and up again, of the speaker's arms, which gives the appearance of two hatchets incessantly at work. Generally speaking, moderation is better than superfluity of gesticulation. Nothing is more wearisome to the audience than a violent delivery without respite ; and next to a monotony of voice, nothing more readily puts it to sleep than a gesture for ever repeated, which marks with exactness each part of the period, as a pendulum keeps time. This portion of oratorical delivery, more im- portant than is supposed, greatly attended to by the ancients, and too much neglected by the moderns, may be acquired by all the exercises (fbich form the body, by giving it carriage and ease, grace of coimtenance and motion ; and still more by well-directed studies in elocition in what concerns gesture under a clever master. To this should be added the often-repeated itudy of the example of those speakers who l06 PHYSICAI, ACQTJIEED QUALinES. are most distinguished for the quality in ques tion, — ^which is only too rare at the present day. But what perhaps Conduces more than all this to form the faculty mentioned is the fre- quenting good company, — that is, of the so- ciety most distinguished for elegance of lan- guage and fine manners. Nothing can supply the place in this regard of a primary education in the midst of the most refined class. In this medium the youth fashions himself, as it were, of his own accord, by the impressions he is every moment receiving, and the instinctive imitation of what he sees and hears. It is the privilege of high society, and of what used to be called men of the court. There one learns to speak with correctness and grace, almost without study, by the mere force of habit; and if per- sons of quality combined with this facility of elocution that science, which is to be acquired only by study, and the power of reflection, which is formed chiefly in solitude, — and this is not very compatible with the life of the great world, — they would achieve oratorical guccesses more easUy than other people. But they are, for the most part, deficient m PHTSICAL ACQTTIEED QPALITIEe l07 Bcqiiirements, — ^whereas learned and thinking uen generally err in the manner. To sum up : over and above the store of science and of knowledge indispensable to the orator, — ^who, beyond everything, should be acquainted with his subject, — ^the predisposi- tions most needful in the art of speaking, and susceptible of acquisition, are — 1. The habit of taking thought to pieces, and putting it together, — or analysis and synthesis. 2. A knowledge of how to write correctly, clearly, and elegantly. 3. A capacity for the handling of language at will and without effort, and for the sudden construction of sentences, with- out stoppages or faults. 4. A power of ready and intelligent decla- mation. 5. A neat, distinct, and emphatic utterance. 6. A good carriage of body. 7. An easy, expressive, and graceful gestici* lation. 8. And, above all this, manners and an air of distinction, natural or acquired. PART ii. CHAPTER V. DIVISION OP THB SUBJBCr. We have stated all the dispositions, natural or acquired, which are necessary, or, at aU events, most useful to the orator. We proceed now to set him to work, and we shall consider him in all the steps of his task, and the succes- sive processes which he has to employ, to carry it prosperously to completion. It is perfectly understood that we make no pretence to the laying down of rules; our object is not to promulgate a theory nor a didactic treatise. We are giving a few recom- mendations derived from our own experience,— and each person wlU take advantage of them at DIVISION OF THE SUBJECT. lOS he best may, adopting or leaving according to his convenience what he chooses, and following his own bent or requirements. Each mind, inasmuch as it is a personality, has its individual character, its own life, which can never be another's, although it resembles all of its kind. If in the physical world there are no two things quite alike, still less are there among intelligent and free creatures. Here, a still more wondrous variety prevails in consequence of a certain liberty which exists, and which acts in these different manners, though limited to certain general conditions of development and subject to the same laws. To this is due the originality of minds, which is, in the intellectual order, what responsibility is in the moral. But while fully granting this variety of action, springing from the nature, dispositions, and circumstances of eacl. person, still, after all, as we are of the same species and the same race, and as our mental and physical organisa' tion is at the root the same, we must all, whe-n in similar situations, act in a mam^er funda- mentally analogous, although different • as to form ; and for this reason, indiextions of a 110 DIVISION OF THE SUBJECT. general nature, the result of a long and laborious experience, may, withui a certain measure, prove useful to all, oi: at least to many. This it is whioh encourages us to nnfold the results of ours, giving them for -what they are, without imposing them on anybody, in the deeply sincere desire of doing a service to the young generation which comes after us, and sparing them the rocks and mishaps of a difficult navigation often accomplished by us. To speak in public is to address several per- sons at once, an assemblage incidentally or in- tentionally collected, for some purpose or other. Now this may be done imder the most diverse circumstances, and for various objects, — and accordingly the discourse must be adapted both in matter and in foi-m to these varying condi- tions. Yet are there requisites common to them all, which must be everywhere fulfilled, if the speaker would speak pertinently, and with any chance of success. In fact, the end of public speaking is to win the assent of the hearers, to imbue them witli your own convictions, or at least to incline them to feel, to think, and to will according DIVISION OF THE SUBJECT. HI to four purpose, witi reference to gt given obj --St. I ence, whenever you speak, and whatever the audience, there is something to be said whi sh is indicated by the circumstances ; there is the way in saying it, or the method and plan according to which you will unfold your thought; ard finally there is the realisation of this plan by the actual discourse, composed and attered on the instant before those whom you would persuade. Thus in an extemporaneoua discourse there are three things to be con- sidercd : — 1st. The subject being supplied by the cir- cumstances, there is the preparation of the plan or the organisation of the discourse, by means of which you take possession of your subject. 2ndly. The transcript of impression of this plan (originally fixed on paper by the pen) in the head of the speaker, wherein it should ba written in a living fashion. 3rdly. The discourse itself, or the successive and, as far as possible, complete spoken realisa- tion of the plan prepared. Sometimes the two first operations blend Iia DIVISION OP THE SUBJECT. into one : — as, for example, you have to speak suddenly without having time to write youi plan or to consider it. But when time is allowed, they should be separate, and each requires it own moment. We proceed to examine these three matters k Buccession. PRBPAKATrON OF THE PLAN. ITS CHAP. VI. PEEPAEATION OP THE PLAN. Tub preparation of the plan of a discourse implies, before anything else, a kncwledge of the things about which you have to speak ; but a general knowledge is not enough; you may have a great quantity of materials, of docu- ments, and of information in your memory, and not be aware how to bring them to bear. It sometimes even happens that those who know most, or have most matter in their heads, are incapable of rightly conveying it. The over abundance of acquisition and words, crushes the mind, and stifles it, just as the head is paralysed by a too great determination of blood, or a lamp is extinguished by an excess of oU. Tou must begin, therefore, by methodising what you know about the subject you wish to treat, and thus, in each discourse, you must adopt as your centre or chief idea, the poinl 114 PREPAEATION OF THE PLAN. to be explained, but subordinate to this idea aL the rest, in such a way as to constitute a sort of organism, having its head, its organs, its main limbs, and all the means of connexion and ot circulation by which the light of the paramount idea, emanating from the focus, may be commu- nicated to the furthest parts, even to the last thought, and last word ; as in the human body the blood emerges from the heart, and is spread throughout all the tissues, animating and colour- mg the surface of the skin. Thus only will there be life in the discourse, because a trvie unity wiU reign in it, — ^that is, a natural unity resulting from an interior development, an unfolding from within, and not from an artificial gathering of hetero- geneous members and their arbitrary juxtar position. This constitutes the difference between words that live and words that are dead. These last may often also have a certain brilliancy from the gorgeousness of the style or the elegance of the sentence, but after having for a moment charmed the ear, they leave the mind cold and the heart empty. Tlie speaker not being master of his subject, which he has not PEEPAEATlCiN OF THE PLAIT. 115 gone into, nor made his own by meditation, re fleets or reverberates other people's ideas, with- out adding to them a particle of his heat or of his life. It is a pale and borrowed light, which like that of the moon, enables you to see vaguely and indistinctly, but neither warms nor fertihses ' possessing only a frigid and deadened histre. Speakers of this kind, even when they ex- temporise, speak rather from memory than the understanding or feelings. They reproduce ■more or less easily shreds of what they have read or heard, — and they have exactly enough mind to eifeot this reproduction with a certain facility, which tends to fluency or to twaddle. They do not thoroughly know what they are speaking about ; they do not themselves under- stand all they say, still less make others understand. They have not entered mto their subject; they have fiUed their apprehension with a mass of things relating to it, which trickle out gradually as from a reservoir or through a tap which they open and shut at pleasure. Eloquence of this description is but go nluch plain watet, or rather it is so much troubled water, bearing nothing along its pa* I 2 116 PREPAEATION OF THE PLAN. sage but ■words and the spectres of thoughts, and pouring into the hearer's mind disgust, wearisomeness, and nausea. Silence, which would at least leave the desire of listening, were a hundred fold preferable ; but these spinners of talk, who give us phrases instead of thoughts, and exclamations instead of feelings, take away all wish to hear and inspire a disgust for speak- ing itself. There is no way of avoiding this disad- vantage except by means of a weU-conceived, deeply-considered, and seriously-elaborated plan. He who knows not bow to form such plan, wiU never speak in a living or an eflfective manner. He may become a rhetorician ; but he will never be an orator. Let us, then, see by vhst process this found- ation of the orator's task must be laid ; for it is to a discourse what the anshitect's design is to a building. The plan of a discourw is the wder of the things which Jiave to be uetfolded. You must therefore begin by gatherit*^ these together, whether facts or ideas, and osarooing es>ch separately, in then- relation U> tKo sabjiwt or purport of the discom-se, and v vai*ji«in]ve8, and virtuons actions. 188 ASKAHGEHEin OS YUAM. CHAP. XHL ABRAJff&SCESrr Oy tee FLA^f. ErsBTTHCKG in naiare comes in its awn tiiii« and at the predetermined instant. The tcxaX drops its seed when it is ripe and fit for reprodaction, and the child is bom when tha hour has arrived, and when the new being ii sufficiently organised to live. It is thus with the mental production which the orator bears in his understanding. There is a moment when the idea tends to issue forth from its obscure retreat, in order to ^ght in the world of day, appear in the face of the sun, and there unfold itsel£ Only this much difFerence there is, that the latter production, being intellectual, depends to a certain degree upon the freedom of the mind ; that, consequently, the moment of birth 18 not, in it, predestinary or necessary, as ir AKEANGEMENT OF PLAN. 18S tile physical order, and thus the will of th« author may hasten or delay it often to the injury of the production and of its development. Pre- mature expression (that is, when you seek to reduce to plan an idea which is not ripe, and the organisation of which is still vague) may lead to a failure, or at least to a disappointing oif-shoot. Incapable of life, or capable of only a sickly life — a fate which often befals youthful authors too eager to produce. But, on the other side, too much delay in the composition of the plan, when the idea is ready and demands expression, is equally prejudicial to the work, which may wither, perish, and be even stifled in the imderstanding, for want of that air and light which have become indispens- able to its life, and which it can derive only from being set in the open day. There are men who experience the greatest difficulty imaginable in bringing forth their thoughts, either from a deficiency of the need- ful vigour to put them forward and invest thera svith a suitable fbrm, or from a natural indo- lence which is incapable of continued eflfbrts ; like those plants which will never pierce the goU by their own unaided energy, and fo* 190 ARfiANGEMENT OF PLAN. which the spade must be used at the risk of destroying their tender shoots. This sluggish- ness, or rather incapability of producing when the time is come, is a sign of mental feebleness, cf a species of impotency. It invariably be- tokens some signal defect in the intellectual constitution, and those who are afflicted with it will write little, will write that little with diflSculty, and will never be able to speak ex- temporaneously in public; they will never be orators. Nevertheless, even in him who is capable of becoming one, there is sometimes a certain inertness and lazLaess. We have naturally a horror of labour, and of all kinds the labour of thought is the hardest and the most trouble- some ; so that frequently, for no other reason than to avoid the pain which must be under- gone, a person long keeps in his own head an idea, already perfectly ripe and requuing only to be put forth. He cannot bring himself to take up the pen and put his plan into shape ; he pi-ocrastinates, day after day, under the futile pretext of not having read enough, not having reflBcted enough, and that the moment is not yet X)rac, and that the work will gain by more AUEASTGEMENT OF PLAIT. 191 prolonged studies. Then, by this unseasonable delay, the fruit languishes in the understanding from want of nourishment ; fells by degrees into atrophy, loses its vital force, and dies before it is yet bom. Many an excellent idea thus perishes in the germ, or is stifled in it^ development by the laziness or the debility of the minds which have conceived them, and ■which have been impotent to give them forth. The Almighty's gift is lost through man's feult. This happens to men otherwise distin- guished and gifted with rare qualities, but who dread the responsibOities of duty and the pres- sure of the circumstances in which they may become involved. Under pretext of preserving their fi«edom, but really in order to indulge their indolence, they shun the necessity of labour, with its demands and its fetignes, and thus deprive themselves of the most active stimtdns of intellectual life. Given up to themselves, and fearing every external influence as a bondage, they pass their lives in conceiving without ever jroducing, — in reading without contributing anything of their own, — ^in re- flecting, or rather in ruminating, without ever either writing or speaking publicly. It woxild 1112 ABBANGEMSNT OF PLAN. havo been happy for such men to Lave been C'bliged to work for a living ; for, ia the spur of want their miad would have found a spring which it has missed, and the necesaty of snb- tHtang by labour, or positive hunger, would Lave efifected in them what the love of truth ol of glory was not able to accomplish. The very best thing for hiTn who has received the gift of eloquence, and who could make an iiiator, is, therefore, that he should be compelled to become one. The labour of eloquence, and the labour of thinking which it presupposes, cost so much trouble and are so difficult, that Bave some choice characters, impelled by their genius or by ambition, nothing short of some downright necessity, physical or moral, is re- quisite to drive men to undertake them. But if a man is a professor, and must deliver his lectare or instructions on some fixed day, and at an appointed hour, — or a clergyman, and is obliged to mount the pclpit at such or each a moment ; or a barrister, who has to address the court at the time fixed by the judges ; or member of some council or delibera- tive assembly, under an engagement to speak in a certain bnsiness, then, indeed, a man must AKRASQKMKNT OF PLAN. 193 6e ready, on pain of failing in his duty, or of oompromisiug his podtiou, his reputation. Ob such oooa^ons, an effort is made, laziness la shaken off", and a man strives in earnest either to fikthom the question (and this is never done 80 well as when it is necessiu-y to write or to speak thereon), or else to form a clearer notion of it, or, in short, to prepare the best exposition of it, with a view to producing conviction and persuasion. In this respect, we may saj- in the words of the Gospel, '■^JBhsstd are the poor.'^ Penury or ■want is the keenest spur of the mind and of the will. You ai-e forced to bestir yourselt" and to draw on your inventive re- sources, and in youth especially, which is the most lavovu-able time for secui-ing instruction and :ioquirements, it is a great happiness to be plucked away by necessity firom the enticement of pleasure, the dissipations of the world, the inac- tivity of supineness. There needs nothing short of this kind of compulsion, and of the fear which it inspires, to recal to reflection, meditation, and the persevering exercise of thought, a soul drawn outward by all the senses, athirst for enjo^iuent, and carried away by the superabundance of ii& (which at that age is overflowing) into the 194 AEEANGEMENT OF PL IN. external world, there to seek for that nonrish ment and happiness which it will not there find, Our own entire youth was passed in that violent Btate, that unceasing conflict between the in- Btinct of nature and the duty of toil. For this we know what it costs to achieve the triumph, and what most tends to ensure it. How ought your plan to be arranged ? In order to produce or arrange it weU, you must take your pen in hand. "Writing is a whetstone, or flattening engine, which wonder- fully stretches ideas, and brings out all their malleableness and ductility. On some unforeseen occasion you may, with- out doubt, after a few moments of reflection, array suddenly the plan of your discourse, and speak appropriately and eloquently. This pre- supposes, in other respects, that you are well versed in your subject, and that you have in your understanding chains of thought formed by pre vious meditations; for it is impossible to ex. temporise the thoughts, at least during the whole of a discourse. But if you have time for preparation, never undertake to speak without having put on paper the frame of what you have to say, the links ARRANGKMmrr OF PLAN. 1&5 of your ideas ; and this for two reasons : — tiie first and weightiest is, that you tlius possess your subject bettei*, and accordingly you speak more closely and with less risk of digressions. The second is, that when you write doAvn a thought you analyse it. The division of the subject becomes cleai-, becomes determinate, and a crowd of things which were not before perceived present themselves under the pen. Speaking is thinking aloud, but it is more; it is thinking with method and more distinctly, 80 that in uttering your idea jou not only make others understand it, but you vmderstand it better yourself while spreading it out before your own eyes and mifolding it by words. Writing adds more still to speech, giving it more precision, more fixity, more stiictness, and by being forced more closely to examine what you wish to write down you extract hidden relations, you reach greater depths, wherein may be disclosed rich veins or abundant lodes. We are able to declare that one is never fidly conscious of all that is in one's o^vn thought, except after having written it out. So long as •t remains shut up in the inside of the mind, it preserves a certain haziness; one does not set oi Tf*6 AEEANGEMENT OF PLAN. it completely unfolded; and jne cannot con Bider it on aU sides, in each of its facets, in each of its bearings. Again, whUe it merely flies through the air in words, it retains something vague, mobile, and indefinite. Its outlines are loosely drawn, its shape is uncertain, the expression of it is more or less precarious, and there is always some- thing to be added or withdrawn. It is never more than a sketch. Style only gives to thought its just expression, its finished form, and perfect manifestation. Nevertheless, beware of introducing style into the arrangement of your plan ; it ought to be like an artist's draught, the sketch, which, by a few lines unintelligible to everybody save him who has traced them, decides what is to enter into the composition of the picture, and each object's place. Light and shadow, colouring and expression wiU come later. Or, to take another image, the plan is a skeleton, She dry bone-frame of the body, repulsive to all except the adept in anatomy, but fuU of interest, of meaning, and of significance for him who has studied it and who has practised dissection; for there is not a cartilage, a pro AERANGEMENT OF PLAK. 19T tuberance, or a hollow, which does not mark what that structure ought to sustiiin, — and therefore you have here the whole body in epitome, the entire organisation in miniature. Hence, the moment you ^el that your idea is mature, and that you are master of it in its centre and in its radiations, its main or trunk lines, take the pen and throw upon paper what you see, what you conceive in your mind. If you are young or a novice, allow the pen to have its way and the current of thought to flow on. There is always life in this first rush, and care should be taken not to check its impetus or cool its ardour. Let the volcanic lava run ; it wiU become fixed and crystalline of itself. Make your plan at the first heat, if you be impelled to do so, and ftllow your inspiration to the end; after which let things alone for a few days, or at least for several hours. Then re-read attentively what you have written, and give a new ibrm to your plan ; that is, re-write it from one end to the other, leaving only what is necessary, what is essential. Eliminate in* exorably whatever is accessory or superfluous, and trace, engrave with care the leading cha^ racteristics which determine the configuration 08 i 98 AEEANGEMENT OF PLAIT. of the discourse, and contain within their d» cnarcations the parts which are to compass it. Only take pains to have the principal features well marked, vividly brought out, and strongly connected together, in order that the division of the discourse may be clear and the links firmly welded. OH^HACTEK OF THE PLAN. 199 CHAP. XIV. CHABACTEB OF THE PLAN. The essential properties of the plan are deriv. able from its very nature. As it is the design of the oratorical building, it ought to be drawn ■with neatness, distributed suitably into its com- partments, in right proportions, so that at one glance, the architect or any sensible person versed iu this kind of work, should perceive the aim of the construction or the idea to be realised, as well as the means for attaining it. The plan is a faUure if it does not suggest to the understanding observer these things. First. — The drawing depends on the mind, which conceives and thinks, and on the hand, which wields the pencil. A design will always bear a sure ratio to the manner of feeling, con- ceiving, and reproducing what is seen in nature or what is imagined, and whatever may be the dexterity of the hand, if the soul animate it notj 04 200 CHAKAOTEE OF THE PIAW. if the understanding guide it not, it ■will comr pose nothing but images without life, and copies, exact possibly, yet void of expression. By the simplest touch, by one stroke of the brush, the whole soul may be revealed ; witness that great painter who recognised his equal from a single line traced by him. Now what advice can we give on this head ? All the precepts in the world wiU never teach feeling or conception. We have said pretty nearly all that can be said, when speaking of the conception and formation of ideas. But what may indeed be recommended to the inex- perienced orator is to confine himself in con- structing his plan to the salient features of his subject, to lay down boldly the trunk lines of the discourse, omitting all filling up; to draw broadly, with hatchet-strokes, so to say, and not to set about punctuating, not to get lost in minutise, when the business is to mark out the main ways. Another advice which may be given is, to leave nothing obscure, doubtftd, or vague in these outlines, and to admit no feature into hi» sketch which does not indicate something of importance. By practice and the directiv/ns of OHAKACTEE OF THE PLAN. 201 a skilful master, lie will learn to deal in those potent pencillings whicli express so much in so BmaU a space ; and this it is which makes ex- temporisation so easy and so copious, hecausa each point of the plan becomes instinct with life, and by pressing upon it as you pass along your discourse makes it a spring gushing with luminous ideas and inexhaustible expressions. The first etcliiags of the great masters are sometimes more precious in the artist's eye than their finished pictures, because they dis close the author's thoughts more unveiled, and the means he has adopted for conveying them. And ia like manner the young writer will profitably study the plans of great speakers, in order to learn how to model as they did; and what will be still more improving, he will con- struct those plans himself from their discourses, and by a deep meditation of their masterpieces and the intellectual labour which the construc- tion just hinted demands, he will get further into their innermost thoughts, and wUI better appreciate the relation between those thoughts and the magnificent embodiment of them. Secondly. — The right distribution of youf plan depends also on your manner rf conceiving 302 CHAEACTEK OF THE PLAN. your subject and the end you have in view in your discourse ; nor hare general rules much practical range even here. What is require)? are, good sense, sagacity and tact; good sensv to see things as they are, in their true light, oi in their most favourable aspect, so as not to eay what will not befit the occasion ; sagacity, to turn the subject over, penetrate it throughj analyse it, anatomise it, and exhibit it, first on paper, then in speaking ; tact, to speak appro- priately, leave in the shade vsrhatever cannot appear without disadvantage, and bring out into strong light whatever is most in your favour; to put everything in its own place, and to do aU this quickly, with neatness, clearness, simpUcity, 60 that in the very knot of the statement of the case may be discerned all the folds and coils of the main idea about to be untied and laid forth by the discourse. An Ul-conceived, an ill-divided plan, which does not at once land the hearer right in the middle of the subject and in full posses- sion of the matter, is rather an encumbrance than a help. It is a rickety scaffolding which 'Kill bear nothing. It but loads and disfigure* Uie building instead of serving to raise H. OIIAiJACTEB OF THE PLAN 203 Thirdly. — Proportion and harmony in itfl parts contribute to the beauty of a discourse. In all things beauty is the result of variety in anity and of unity in variety. It is the neces- sity of oneness which assigns to each part its rank, place, and dimensions. Frequently the exordium is too long, and the peroration interminable. There is little or nothing left for the middle ; and you get a monster with an enormous head, a measureless tail, and a diminutive body. At other times it is some limb of the discourse which is lengthened until the body of the work is out of sight, the result being a shocking deformity, as when a man has long arms or legs with a dwarf's body. The main idea ought to come out in each part; the hearer ought to be always led back to it by the development of the accessory thoughts, however numerous, these having no regular vitality save by the sustained circulation through them of the former. Should they grow and dilate too much, it can only be at the cost of the parent- idea; and they must produce deformity and a Bort of disease in the discourse, like those mon- itrous excrescences which devour the animal as 304 CHAEACTER OF THE I'LAN when there is any irregular or excessive growth of one organ, through the abnormal congestion of the blood, thus withdrawn from the rest of the organisation. It is chiefly when you have to extemporise that you must take the most care of your di- vision, and of the nice allotment of aU the parts of your plan ; one of the disadvantages of extemporisation, and perhaps the greatest disadvantage being, diffuseness, slowness, and digressiveness, when you trust to the inspiration of the moment, excitement of speaking, — ^foi you cannot always command the result amidst the mass of words and the distractions of the imagination. Ton will obviate this danger, as far a« may be, by strongly determining beforehand the proportion of the various parts ; and this so clearly and so strikingly as never to lose sight of it while speaking, and thus to be constantly recalled to it, and to recall the hearer athwart the digressions, episodes, or sudden develop- ments which may present themselves, and which are not always to be excluded ; nay, sometimes nmidM tho emotions of sensibility or the tr^ns CHAEAOTEB OF THE PLAN. 206 ports of passion, into which by the torrent of extemporisation the orator may be hurried. Let the plan of the speech, then, be tracoO with a firm hand, distributed with exactitude, and rightly proportioned in all its members, and then it will be an immense help to the speaker whom the suddenness and adventu- rousness of extemporisation invariably agitates more or less. He will then abandon himseU with greater confidence to his inspirations and to the tide of words, when he feels a solid ground well known to him beneath his feet ; and is aware of aU its advantages and incon- veniences, if he rciuain always mindful of the end he has in view and of the way which leadu U»it, 30b PEEPAKATION. CHAP. XV. run XL PEEPAKATION BBFOEE SPEAKING. The plan of a discourse, however well put together, is still hut a harren letter, or, as wa have said, a species of skeleton to which flesh and vitality must he given hy words. It is the discourse potentially, and has to become such actually. Now before passing from the power of acting to action, and with a view to effecting this passage, which at the very moment of executing it is always difficult, there is a last preparation not without its importance and calculated to conduce largely towards success. Thus the soldier gets ready his weapons and his resolution before the fight ; thus the general makes his concluding arrangements after having fixed on his order of battle, and in order to carry it well into effect. So it is with the speaker at that supreme instant. After having fixed his ideas upon paper in a clearly defined PMBPAEATION. 207 i.kijx.ch which is to him a plan of the campaign, he ought, a little while before entering the lists or battle field, to recollect himself once more in order to gather up aU his energies, call fortl all the powers of his soul, mind, and body for the work which he has undertaken, and hold them in the spring and direction whither they have to rush. This is the culminating point of the preparation, a critical moment which is very agitating and very painful to whoever is about to speak. We shall proceed to depict it, and to show what may then be done towards the success of a discourse, by the use of the speaker's entire means, that is, of all his intellectual, moral, and physical faculties. For the true orator speaks with his entire per- sonality, with aU the powers of his being, and for that reason, at the moment just preceding his address, he should summon, and marshal, Bod concentrate all his instruments. 208 rnvTAI rHEPARA7I0M. CHAP. XVI. FINAL INTEIXECTUAL PEEPARATION. The plan is written down, but it is outside th« mind, it is on paper ; and although it has issued from the mind, still the hnkuig of ideas is a thing so suhtUe that it easily escapes, and es- pecially in the midst of the tunnoi! in which the speaker must take his stand, and which is liable to present a thousand distracting contin gencies. An hour, therefore, or half an hour, or a quarter of an honr before speaking, he ought at the last moment to go over his plan again silently, review all its parts with their connexion, settle, in the most definite manner the main ideas and the order in which they occur; in a word, deeply inscribe or engrave in his imagination what is written on the paper, BO as to be able to read within himselfj in his own understanding, and this wilh certainty and without effort, the signs of what he has to say. FmAI> PEEPAEATION. 209 This is, KS it were, the internal proof-eopy of l.ho external manuscript, in order that, without the help of notes, he may find the whole array of his ideas upon the living tablets of his ima gination. For this purpose, he sums up that array once again, and epitomises it in a few words which perform the office at once of colours and of sign-posts — colours around which are mus tered fragmentary or incidental thoughts, like soldiers around theii" officer, and sign-posts indicating the road to be followed in order to reach the destination without fail. Finally, by one supreme exertion of thought, he connects all these signs together in order to take in them all at a single glance in their respective places and their mutual bearings, with a view to the end which the discourse is intended to attain ; just as a general acts, who, as the fight begins, looks from some height upon the ordering of Lis army and sees each division and regiment wliere he had appointed them to be. Then, nf'ter having possessed himself of the whole by means of this glance, he holds it as it were ii, his grasp and can hui'l it into action according to the plan which he has conceived. It is easy to understand that in order to be able to do P 210 FINAL PEEPAEATION. this, the pJan must net only have been well conceived and well ordered, but clearly written out on paper, so that, at a moment of such pressure, a single glance may suffice to review both as a whole and in its parts. In general, the shortest are the best plana, if they be well fiUed and loaded with ideas ; and whenever it is practicable to reduce all the ideas to one, the various consequences of which are thus derivatively commanded, nothing can be so convenient or so sure. This accounts for the fact that one may sometimes speak wonderfully well without so much preparation, and produce a very great effect. AU that is required is one idea, of which the speaker is deeply convinced and the conse- quences and applications of which he clearly discerns, or else some lively and heart-stirring sentiment ; and then the light of the idea or the emotion of the feeling bursts forth into words like the pent-up torrent of a reservoir through a fissure in the dam ; but the water-shed must have been full, and the plentcousness of the inundation supposes protracted toil for the previous collection. It is thus with the moat prompt and copious extemporisations ; they ara FUfAl PEEPABATION. 211 Invariably the reservoir of ideas and feelings, prepared and accumulated witli time, and rush- ing fbrth in a discourse. In all cases, what is of the first importance IS to see an the ideas in a single idea, in ordei to keep up the imity of the subject, amidst variety of exposition and the multiplicity of representations; for in this consists the fine ordering of a speech. Once sure of the leading idea, the divisions and sub-divisions must be rapidly inspected. You must proceed from one to the other reflectively in order to test what they wUl be worth at the decisive instant, and to penetrate them by a last glance of the mind, — a glance which is never more vigorous or more piercing than at that important moment. You must act like the general who passes among the ranks before the signal is given, and who assures himself by the mien of his troops that they will behave well, while he excites their courage by words of fire, and pours fresh spirit and boldness into their hearts. He too has his picked troops on whom he relies more than on the rest, and these picked troops are to »ct at the crisis of the fight. He keeps them in re« »erve to decide the victory, and he is awara p2 212 FINAL PKEPAOA-TIOK. befbrehand of all the power with which thej furnish him. So, among the various thoughts which make up a discourse; and in their array, there are some better calculated than the others to strike the imagination and to move the soul: some stirring picture, some unusually interesting narrative, some convincing proof^ some motive which will carry away the hearer's decision ; a/id the like. The orator, during his final preparation, distinguishes and places in reserve these resources. He arranges them appropri- ately so as to bring them in at such a part of his discourse ; and without fully fathoming them before it is time, he keeps them under Ids eye, well knowing that here are weUs of living water which shall gush forth when he desires it, at a touch of the sounding rod. Upon such means the success of a speech generally turns, as the winning of a battle upon a charge opportunely made. Only care must be taken not to confound these reserves of idea, these well husbanded resources, with what are called hits of eloquence or eflfective phrases. These last devices which eometimes fling a brilliant radiance over a speech FINAL PREPARATION. 213 by a tjemblance of originality, by ecccntri« perceptions, by far-fetched approximations, and above all by strangeness of expression, run the risk almost invariably of sacrificing sense to Bound, substance to forir* and of superseding depth of thought and warmui of feeUng by sound of words and an exaggerated oratorical delivery. You get to aim at effect, that is, at astonishing your hearers and making them admire you; you therefore use every means of dazzling and confounding them, which is nearly always done at the expense of your subject's truthfulness and of your own dignity. Besides, as you cannot extemporise these effective phrases, because the effect depends on a certain combination of words very difficult to arrange and spoilt if a single word be amiss, you have to compose ^hese phrases beforehand, learn them by heart and know them literally; and even then you kave stiU to get them into your discourse and to prepare their admission, in order that they may make a briUiant appearance and produce the wished-for effect. The consequence is that you convey them from a greater or a smaller dis- tance with more or less artifice and disguise, so that a part of the f xpceition is devoted to '•ieai* p i 214 FINAL PEEPAEATION. ing the way for them, and to marshalling then entry on the boards — a process which necea- sarily entails fiUings-up, gaps, and lengthinesa of various passages respectively. And, indeed, these brilliant hits which discharge a great amount of sparks, and a small amount of either light or heat, are for the most part purchased at the price of the truthfulness as well as the interest of the discourse. It is a fire-work display which dazzles and charms for a moment, only to plimge you in thick dark- ness again. This is not a genuine nor moving eloquence ; it is the parody of eloquence and a mere parade of words; if I may dare to say so, a sort of oratorical charlatanry. Woe to the speaker who makes use of such means! He will speedily exhaust himself by the mental efforts to find out new effects, and his addresses, aiming at the sublime and the extraordinary, wUl become often ludicrous, always impotent. Nor must you rely on the notes which you may carry in your hand to help you in the exposition and save you from breaking down. Doubtless, they may have their utility, cspeci' ally in business speaking, as at the bar, at the FlNAi PKKPARATION. 215 council board, or in a deliberative assembly. Sometimes they are even necessary to re- member facts or to state figures. They are the material part, the baggage of the orator, and he should lighten them and disencumber himself of their burden, t3 the utmost of hia power. In truth, on the very occasions when it should seem you would have most need of them, they are totally worthless. In the most fervid moments of extemporaneous speakiag, when light teems, and the sacred fire burns, when the mind is hurried along upon the tide of thoughts, and the tongue, obedient, to its im- pulse, accommodates itself in a wonderful man- ner to its operations and lavishes the treasures of expression, everything should proceed from within. The mind's glance is bent iawards, absorbed by the subject and its ideas; you distinguish none of the external objects, and you can no longer ev»n read your notes on the paper. You see the lines without uuder- fitanding them, and they become an embarrass- ment instead of a help. Nothing so thoroughly freezes the oratorical flow as to consult those wretched notes. Nothing is so inimical to the prestige of eloquence; it forthwith bringa p4 2)0 FINAIi fKEPAKATIOW. do^vTi to the common earth both the speakei and his audience. Try then, when you have to speak, to carry all things in yourself^ like Bias the philosopher, and after having, to the best of your abUity, conscientiously prepared, allow yourself, filled with your subject, to be borne along by the current of your ideas and the tide of words, and above all by the Spirit from on High who enlightens and inspires. He who cannot speak except with notes, knows not how to speak, and knows not even what speaking is; just as the man of lore who is so only with his books around him, is not so truly, and knows not even what learning is. In fine, you must distrust aU methods of mnemonics or artificial memory, intended to localise and to fagot together in your imagina- tion the difierent parts of your address. Cicero and QuintUian recommend them, I think, in moderation; be it so, but let it be in the strictest possible moderation. For it is putting the mechanism of form in the stead of the or- ganisation of thoughts, — substituting arbitrary and conventional links for the natural associa- tion of ideas ; at the very least, it is introducing FIKAL iTtEV AKA'nON. SIT into the head an apparatus of signs, forms, OT imageij "vldch are to serve as a support to the discourstj, and which must needs burden, ob- scure, and "bamper the march of it. If your address be the expression of an idea fraught with lit'i, it wUI develope itself natu- rally, as plants germinate, as animals grow, through the sustain t«d action of a vital force, by an incessant organio operation, by the effusion of a living principle It ought to issue from the depths of the soal, as the stream from its spring — ex, ahundantia cordis os loquitur, " out of the fulness of the heart the mouth speaketh." But a heart there must be ; and in that heart a fulness of feeling, manifesting itself by a plenitude of ideas, which will give in its turn plenitude of expression. The mouth speaks with ease when the heart is full ; but if it is empty, the head takes its office, and it is the head which has recourse to these artificial means, for want of the inspiration which &Uf it. It is the resource of rhetoricianti. 318 imiAi, PT?TcPjiB*-""it. CHAP, xvn. FINAL MOEAl PEEPABATION, When you at last are in possession of youi plan, and have engraved it upon your under- standing, in the manner we have just said, you must try to remain cabn and collected. This is not always so easy, on account of the place where you have to speak, at the bar, for in- stance, or in a public scene, or a deliberative assembly. You are not in such cases free to choose your own moment, and you have to be ready for the occasion. You may have to wait long for your turn, and till then there occur un- avoidable distractions, from which you must keep yourself safe. If the will reject them, the mind remains self-possessed, and may even pre- serve its coUectedness amidst the most varied scenes, which indeed may touch the senses, without disturbing the mind. lONAL PKEPAEA-nON. 219 But if you have it in your power to remaiE in solitude until the moment for spsakiug, aa generally happens to the preacher and the lecturer, it is well to avoid all external excite- ment which might change the current of the thoughts, and drive your attention into an other channel. You should then take refuge within the depth of yourself, as in a sanctuary where the Almighty has designed to manifest Himself since your object in speaking is but to announce the truth, and the Almighty is Truth itself. I do not speak here of those men who dis- course solely in the interests of passion or of party, and whose object is not the triumph of what is true, but merely the gain of some success, some advantage, conducive to their ambition, their pride, or their avarice. These men will never be orators in the proper sense of the word — vir bonus dicendi peritus ; for lan- guage ought not to be used except in the interests of truth — ^to employ it for any other end is to make of it a commodity or a traffic. If in the stage which we are depicting, the 60u] of him who is about to speak be liable to fisel variously affected, according to the variety i20 FINAL PEEPAEATTON. of character, predisposition, and moinentarj state, sometunes, after the final preparation is over, it perceives that it possesses its subject, that it is master of it, so far as this may be, and it then experiences a certain sense of security which is not without sweetness. A mind in this state need think no more of any- thing, but may remain passive and repose itself ere proceeding to action. It has some- times happened to myself to fall asleep while awaiting the summons to the pulpit, to lose consciousness, at least, and to awake refreshed. At other times, and indeed mon frequently, a man is restless and agitated. The chest is weighted with a heavy burden which checks the breathing, makes the limbs sore, and op- presses aU the faculties of mind and body. This is an extremely painful state, especially if a man has to speak on a grave occasion, on a solemn day, and in the Christian pulpit. One is conscious then that there is a divine duty to be discharged, and there is a fear of provinj unfaithful or unequal to it ; one feels the full weight of responsibility before God. It is a truly agonising sensation, in which several feelings are blended, and which it may not ht FINAL PEEPAEATIOK. 221 nseless to analyse, in order to distinguish what it comprises that is legitimate, that is advan- tageous to an orator, and, on the contrary what is amiss in it and liable to do him harm. In the first place, it is to be noted that this fright, experienced by him who is on the point of speaking, is salutary, at least to a certain extent. It is evident that if it goes to the length of paralysing the orator, or of impairing the use of his means, it is inconvenient and fatal. But those whom it is able thus to crush, wiU never be capable of speaking in public, as we have already observed in the case of two celebrated writers, admirable for their style and powerless in harangue. Woe to him who experiences no fear before speaking in public 1 It shows him to be un- conscious of the importance of the function which he is about to discharge, — that he does not understand what truth is, whose apostle he himself should be, or that he little cares, and that he is not animated by that sacred fire which comes down from heaven to bum in the Boul. I except altogether the Prophets, the Apostles of Jesus Christ, all who speak undef lupematural iTispiration, and who have been 222 FINAL PEEPAEATION. told that they must not prepare what they shaU say when they shall stand before the powerful and the arbiters of the world, for that all they should say shall be given to them at the time itself. It is not for men like these that we write. The Almighty, whose instruments they are, and who fills them with His Spirit, makes them act and speak as He pleases, and to them the resources of human experience are entirely un- necessary. They never are a&aid, because He who is truth and light is with them, and speaks by them. But others are not afraid because their enlightenment is small and their self-assurance great. They are unconscious of the sacredness of their task and of their min- istry, and they go forward like children who, knowing not what they do, play with some ter- rible weapon, and with danger itself. The most valiant troops always feel some emotion at the first cannon shot, and I have heard it stated that one of the most celebrated generals of the empire, — who was even called " the bravest of the brave," was always obliged to dismount from his horse at that solenm moment; aflei which ho rushed like a lion into the battle FINAL PEEPAEATION. 223 Braggarts, on the contrary, are full of assur- ance before the engagement, and give way during the action. So is it with those fine talkers, who think themselves competent to undertake any sulgect and to face any audience, and who, in the ex- cellent opinion which they entertain of them- selves, do not even think of making any serious preparation. After a few phrases uttered with confidence, they hesitate, they break down, or if they have sufficient audacity to push forward amidst the confusion of their thoughts and the incoherency of their discourse, they twaddle without understanding their own words, and drench their audience with their inexhaustible volubility. It is well then to feel somewhat afraid era speaking, first in order that you may not lightly expose yourself to the trial, and that you may be spared the mortification ; and, in the second place, still more particularly, if you are obliged to speak, in order that you may maturely con. aider what you should say, seriously study your subject, penetrate it, become master of it, and thus be able to speak usefully to a publia audience. 024 FINAL PEEPAEATION. The fear in question is also useful in making the speaker feel his want of help from above, such as shall give him the adequate light, strength, and vividness of life. All men who have experience in pubUo speaking, and who have ever themselves been eloquent, know how much they have owed to the inspiration of the moment, and to that mysterious power which gives it. It is precisely because a man maj have sometimes received this efficacy from above, rendering him superior to himself, that he dreads being reduced to his own strength in that critical situation, and so to prove beneath the task which he has to accomplish. This fear which agitates the soul of a person about to speak, has also another and a less noble cause, which unfortunately prevails in the majority of instances; that is, self-love, — vanity, which dreads falling below oneself and below the expectations of men, — a desire of success and of applause. Public speaking is a singularly conspicuous sort of thing, exposing a person to aU manner of observations. Doubt- less there is no hai-m in seeking the esteem of one's fellows, and the love of a good reputation is an honourable motive of action, capable of FINAL TKEPAEATION. 225 producing excellent effects. But carried too far, it becomes a love of gloi-y, a passion to make a dazzling appearance, and to cause one self to become the theme of talk, — and then, like all other passions, it is ready to sacrifice truth, justice, and good to its own gratification or success. Nothing can be better than that the orator should endeavour to please and satisfy his audience; that desire will impel him to noble exertions and the exercise of all his means ; but that, whUe actually speaking, such an end should engross him above everything else, and that the care of his own glory should agitate him more than any love of the truths which he has to announce, or of the souls of the hearers whom he should enlighten and edify, — ^this, I say, is a gross abuse, a perversion of the talent and of the ministry intrusted to him by Providence, and sooner or later will bring him to grief. This inordinate attention to himself and his success agitates, disturbs, and makes him unhappy, — too often inciting him to ex- aggerations for the sake of effect. In takmg from him simplicity it takes his right sense, hi* Q 'i26 FINAL PREPAUATION. tact, his ^ood taste, and he becomes displeasing by dint of striving to please. Yet far from us be the idea of condemning a \o\e of glory in the orator, and especially in the lay orator. While stiU young a man needs this spur, which sometimes produces prodigies of talent and of labour ; and it may safely be affirmed that a very great progress must have been made in wisdom and perfection to dispense with it altogether. Even where it ought to have the least influence, it stUl too often has sway, and the minister of the holy Word, who ought to be inspired by the Spirit from on High, and to refer exclusively to God all that he may do, has much difficulty in preserving himself indifferent to the praises of men, seeking these praises only too often, and thus making self, almost unconsciously, the end of his speaking and of his success. In such a case the move- ments of nature and of grace get mingled in nis heart, and it is hard to distinguish and separate them. This is the reason why so many deceive themselves, and why piety itself bas its illusions. If it is good to entertain some fear before ipeaking, it would nevertheless be prejudicial FINAL PEEPAEATION. 22T lo entertain too much: first, because a greal fear disturbs the power of expression ; and Becondly, because if it does not proceed from timidity of character, it often springs from ex- cessive self-love, from too violent an attachment to praise, or from the passion of glory, which overcomes the love of truth. Here is that which one should try to combat and to abate in oneself. The real orator should have but what is true in view ; he should blot himgelf out in presence of the truth and make it alone appear, — as happens naturally, spontaneously, when- ever he is profoundly impressed by it, and ideu- tifles himself with it, heart and mind. Then he grows like it, great, mighty, and dazzling. It is no longer he who lives, it is the truth which in him lives and acts ; his language is truly inspired; the man vanishes in the virtue of the Almighty who manifests himself by His organ, — and this is the speaker's noblest, his true glory. Then are wrought the miracles of eloquence which turn men's wills and change their souls. Such is the end at which the Christian orator should aim. He should try to dwarf himself, to annihilate himself, as it were, in his discourse, in order to allow Him whosf a2 228 FINAL PEBPAEATION. minister he is, to speak and to work, — a result oftenest attained when the speaker thinks he lias done nothing, on account of his too fervent and too natural desire to do a great deal. Oh, you who have taken the Lord for your inheritance, and who prefer the light and ser- vice of Heaven to all the honours and all the works of earth, — yon, particularly, who are called to the Apostleship, and who glow with the desu-e to announce to men the word of God! rememher that here, more than anywhere else, virtue consists in disinterestedness, and power in abnegation of self. Endeavor to see in the triumphs of eloquence, if they be granted you one thing only, — the glory of God. If you have the gift of touching the souls of others, seek one thing only, — ^to bring them, or bring them back, to God. For this end repress, stifle within your heart, the natural movements of pride, which, since the days of sin, woidd attri« bute all things to itself, even the most manifest and the most precious gifts ; and each time that you have to convey to the people the Word of Heaven, ask urgently of God the grace to for- get yourself, and to think of Him and of Him only. BODU.T PEEPAEATION. 22§ CHAP. XVIII. BODILY PKBPAEATION. Thk body also requires to be prepared in a certain manner before an harangue. It should be subjected to a sort of magnetism, as the phrase runs m these days ; and the orator -who knows the difficulties and the resources of his art will take very good care not to undertake a speech, unless he is compelled by circumstances to do so, without making hia arrangements in this respect too. Let it not be forgotten that the body plsys its part in all that we do, even in the most abstract thoughts and the most exquisite feel- ings. We are not angels, and the human socsl cannot act here below without the co-oper&tioa of the organisation to which it is united, and which forms an essential part of its personality. The £!go, in truth, is applicable to the functioui of the body no less than to those of the mjad. {l man says: "Zwalk, T eat, I digest," as ht as ESO BODILY PKEPAEATIOU. Bays, "I think, I wish, I love;" and although the organs have an inferior office in human actions, yet that office is sufficiently consider- »ble for the organs to promote or to impede those actions in a signal manner. The body then should be weU disposed in order that the inteUectual and moral functions may be properly performed, and that they may not experience a hindrance where they ought to find an assistance. In the first place, the general state of the health ought to be good, or at least tolerable, in order that the thinking power may enjoy instruments ready to receive its impulses, and the will be able easUy to set them in motion. A man speaks with difficulty when suffering. Life is then checked, and, so to say, absorbed by the organs, which diverts it from intellectual action, or at least weakens its activity in that respect. One may, doubtless, by an effort of the wiU, excited by circumstances, do violence to the rebellion or inertness of the body, and hurl it into action, — but never without great fatigue, an exhaustion of one's strength , and, later, its indisposition and its decay entail a painful reaction after this unseasonable soaring, «o that the higher the previous elevation, the BODILY PEEPAKATION. 231 deeper the subsequent fall. Now the oratoi ought to spare a servant so necessary to him, just as an accomplished rider treats the generous steed whom he might ruin on a single occasion by over urging him. The orator should have a strong constitution ; he should have a sound head, a good digestion, and, above all, a robust chest, for nothing is so fatiguing or so exhausting as declamation when long continued. I speak of oratorical declama- tion, which brings simultaneously into action the whole person, moral and physical, — the head, aU the economy of which is strained to the uttermost by extemporisation ; the lungs, which inhale and respire with violence, frequently with a shock and a gulp, according to the dm- course ; the larynx which is expanded and con- tracted precipitately ; the nervous system which is wound up to the highest degree of sensi- bility; the muscular system which is keenly agitated by the oratorical stage-play from the sole of the foot to the tips of the fingers; and, finally, the blood which warms, boils, make« heart and arteries teat with quick strokes, and Bhoots fire through the whole organisation, till the humours of the body evaporate and stream q4 232 BODILY FEEPAEATIOH. in drops of perspiration along the sarface of tliB ekin. Judge from this whether, in order to bear such fatigue, health and vigour be required. Nevertheless, there is an illusion against which you must be on your guard ; it is that of thinking yourself ill when you have to speak in public, and to mistake for inability the often very sensible indisposition which you expe- rience when called upon for a discourse, either through the indolence which is deterred by labour and fatigue, or on account of the extreme emotion which is felt at the thought of appear- ing in public, an emotion which produces on the body, and on the bowels especially, an effect reacting all over you. Tour arms and legs hang dead, you can hardly drag yourself along or even stand upright. There is an oppression of the respiration, a weight on the chest, and a man experiences, in a fashion sometimes very burdensome, what was felt by the bravest of the brave at the first cannon-shot. Many a time do I remember having found myself in this state at the moment for mounting the pulpit and while waiting for my summons. Could I have only fled away without shame, mos\ assuredly I should have made off, and I envied BODILY PEEPARATION. 233 the lot of those poor creatures who think of nothing or of no great matter, and who know not these agonies and lacerations. They who have not the strength to overcome these temptations and discouragements will never know how to speak. They wiU not even have the courage to expose themselves to such trials, I may as well say it, they amount occa. sionally to such a torture that a man involim- tarUy compares himself to a convict dragged to the gallows. Those who have known this state and triumphed over it are aware that I do not exaggerate. Strange ! It proves the contradictions which exist in man as he is, whose original consti- tution has been overthrown by sin which has set in opposition to each other, in one and the same person, the various elements which ought to harmonise in the unity of a single life. You wish and you do not wish simultaneously; body is at war with the mind, and their laws come into collision and into conflict. The soul, enlightened by divine truth, touched by charity, transported by the Spirit of God, or by the lova of glory, desires to proclaim what it sees, knows, believes, feels, even in the teeth of con« 234 BODILY PKEPABATION. tradiction, and at the cost of the greatest fatigue, nay, sometimes of the sharpest suffer- ings ; but the body, like some unbroken beast, tefuses to the utmost of its power, and you cannot get it along save with a bloody spur. It resists with aU its might, takes every oppor- tunity of evasion, every opportunity to shake off the reins which rule it and control its move- ments. A man of spirit would afterwards be inconsolable that he should have shrunk at the moment of appearing in public, if duty obliges him. like a soldier, for having wavered at the beginning of the action ; and yet, in the former case, I can bear witness, and perhaps in the latter, — I know it not, — a man would, a hun- dred times over, surrender his task ere under- taking it, — if he dared. I know but one effectual remedy for this fear, — ^the remedy I have already indicated; it is never to mount platform or pulpit, save on the caU of conscience alone, — to fulfil a duty, and to put aside whatever is merely personal, — glory, reputation, public opinion,— whatever relates to self. A man then goes forward as a victim of duty, resigned to the laLrifice, and seeking only the glory of Hint BODILY PEEPAEA.'nON. 235 lo vrhom the sacrifice is offered. Ton nevei succeed better than under these conditions, and everybody is a gainer ; the speaker, in calmness, dignity, and simplicity, — the audience, hi a loftier and more penetrating address, be- cause it is untainted by selfishness and almost above what is merely human. Some persons calculate upon giving them- selves courage by stimulating drinks or by a generous nourishment. A strange sort of courage that! In war, where physical force predominates, I can conceive such a thing, — and it is a resource not to be disdained before a battle ; but as our business is a battle of elo- quence, that is of the subtilest, most intelligentj and most mental element that can be imagined, there is need of another spirit rather than the spirit of alcohol or of wine to stimulate the faculties and warm the heart. Orators who liave recourse to such means in order to become capable of moving their hearers, will never get beyond the sphere of the imagiaation and of the senses, and if they ever have any eloquence, it will be that of the dubs, the taproom, and the crossroads, — an eloquence which has a power of Its own, but in the interest of evil passions. 236 BODILY PEEPAEATION. Finally, in a physical respect, there are pra cautions to be taken, relatively to such and such an organ which, from its habitual weakness, or its ii'ritated state may need repose or strength- ening. In this, each person must manage according to his temperament, constitution, and habits. Some are unable to speak fasting, and no wonder; for it is indispensable to be well supported agauist a fatigue so great. The "oice is weakened, broken by inanition or an empty stomach. Others, again, cannot speak after a meal, and this too is intelligible; because the labour of thinking draws the blood to the head, and defrauds the stomach of it, thus stopping diges- tion, — 80 that the blood throbs violently in the head and produces giddiness. As in aR other earthly cases, the right course here is the middle course. You should have had nourishment, but in moderation ; and you should not speak, except before digestion has begun its labour, or else after it has so far proceeded as not to be anj longer liable to be arrested. Every one must settle his own regimen of health in this matter, and nobody can know Whtit will agree with him so well as the speake? BODILY PREPARATION. 237 fiimself. He will therefore do as did tlia athletes of old, who underwent a most rigor- ous discipline in order that they might be masters of their whole strength at the moment of conflict ; and Lf they had this resolution who contend in mere bodily strifes, and for perish- able garlands, what ought not the wrestlers of eloquence to undergo, whom the Almighty calls to the battles of intelligence, to the pro- clamation and the defence of truth, of justice, of excellence, of the noblest of things of both heaven and earth, and to a share in their death- less glory ! ?38 PARTS OF THE DI80CTIESE. CHAP. XIX. XHB DISCOUBSE. We have said how the orator should prepare In mind, heart, and even body, for the great work of addressing others ; let us now foUow him to his lield of action at the moment when he is about to establish truth, or combat error with the sword of eloquence. This is the Bolemn moment of battle. For the sake of greater clearness we will divide this consideration into six points, and arrange tmder that number of heads all that we have to say that may be the most useful. We do not aim in this laying down any in- violable order, but merely at having a frama to unite and connect our remarks, our reflec- tions, and the results of our experience ; for we must here repeat that we have had no in- tention of writing a treatise on the oratorical art; our object being merely to give an account PAET3 OF THE DTSC0tJK3E. 239 to others of what we have done ourselves, and of how we have done it. "We shall speak serially: first, of the begin- ning of the discourse, or exordium; secondly, of the entry upon the subject, or start; thirdly, of the realization of the plan, or the exposition and the progression of the ideas ; fourthly, of the supreme (all decisive) moment of the dis course ; fifthly, of the peroration ; stxthij^ of oratorical action. 5^t'» TIIH! OOMMKNOJCMKKT. CLIAI'. XX. TIIK liWilN'NINO OJt KXOUKIUM, I TKBM tlio lir^^^iiitiinf^ cv Cry tiling w)i'wM the ondor mUim'H (Vorn the iiiorri(!iit, In: <)\icnH hifl mouth to tfio Trioiriont wlii^n ho dot rrii:canH<; hossible of the idea which he has to exhibit Here sliould a 242 TITE OOMMENCEMENT. be no vagueness nor obscurity, but a clear in' tuition and an unhesitating expression. It U in this that the majority of would-be extem- porisers faU, because, for want of reflection and meditation, they know clearly neither the ob- ject of their discourse nor the way to treat it. They perceive it in the gross or approximately, and thereupon they utter common-places, empty generalities, and turn continually around and about their subject, without ever once going into it. Those who speak are in quite a different position at starting from that of persons who recite. They are generally weak and rather obscure in the opening, whereas the others ap- pear strong and brilliant. But it is the same with whatever has life in nature. Life always opens by an obscure point, hardly perceptible, and proceeds from darkness to light. Accord- ing to Genesis, all things were created from night to morning. But life grows and assumes organisation little by little, and finally it blooms into all its magnificence. So with the spoken address, which is a something endued with life, it is born, it grows, it assumes organisation in the hearer's presence. THE COMMENCEMENT. 2i3 For this reason, the speaker ought to begin Boftly, modestly, and without any pompoua announcement of what is to follow. The grain of mustard-seed, which is the smallest of seeds, produces a great tree in which the hirds of heaven come and take shelter. The exordium of an extemporaneous dis- course ought to be the simplest thing in the world. Its principal use is in laying the subject well down and in giving a glimpse of the idea which has to be developed. Unquestionably, if circumstances require it, you may also introduce certain oratorical pre- cautions, — ^insinuations, commendations, and a delicate and supple mind always finds a way to uisert these things. But, generally they clog that mind, because they are outside of its idea and may divert it from the idea ; and as the expressions are not ready made, the mind runs a risk of being carried away from its subject at the Qrst start, and of missing its plan. For the samo reason, the speaker's voice will be moderate, nay a little weak at first, and it may happen, at least in a vast audience, that his first expressions are not heard, or are heard ilL This is of course an inconvenienoe, but il b2 844 THE COMMENCEMENT. cannot be helped, and it is not without its ad. vantages. It cannot be helped, or can scarcely be sOj because as he who extemporises carries all Mg ideas in his brain, and is never quite sure of his language, he always gets into the pulpit or upon the platform in a state of deep emotion. Now it is out of the question to bawl when in that state, and it is the most one can do to find voice at all; the mouth is dry, the tongue cleaves to the palate, — " vox faucibus hceret," — and one can hardly articulate. Besides, should the orator force his voice in the beginning, it will be presently rendered hoarse, broken, exhausted, and it wiU fail him before a quarter of an hour. You must speak neither too loudly nor too fast at first ; or else the violent and rapid expansions and contrac- tions of the larynx force it and falsify it. You must husband your voice at starting in order that it may last and maintain itself to the end. When you gradually strengthen and animate it, it does not give way, — ^it remains clear, strong, and pleasing to the close of your harangue. Now this is a very important particular foi speaker and for hearers; for the former, because THE COMMENCKMENT. 243 he keeps sound and powerful the instrument without which he can do nothing ; for the latter because nothing tires them more than hoaraej obstreperous, and ill-articulated sounds. The inconvenience in question has the furthei advantage of establishing silence among the audience, especially if it is considerable and diffused over a vast space, as in churches. At the beginning of a sermon, there is always noise ; people taking their places, chairs or benches turning, coughs, pocket-handkerchiefs, murmurs, a hubbub more or less protracted, which is unavoidable in a large assembly of persons settling themselves. But if you speak low, softly, and the audience sees you speak, without hearing you, it will make haste to be still that it may listen, and all ears will be directed more eagerly towards the pulpit. In general, men esteem only what they have not, or what they dread losing, and the words which they fear they shall not be able to catch, become more valuable. For the same reason, again, the bearing of the extemporaneous speaker is modest and even somewhat abashed, as he presents himself in tlie pulpit, or on the platform ; for he almosf r3 ^46 THE COMMENCEMENT. invariably mounts thither as to the place of torture, so full is he of anguish, so heavy feela the burden of speaking. Nevertheless, he must beware of allowing his agitation to be too apparent, and above al' of affecting the victim. For the rest, if he be a true orator, his counte- nance, as well as interior feelings, will soon change. He will hardly have pronounced a few sentences ere all his confusion will vanish, the mind will assert its superiority and sway the body. Once face to face, and at grappling point with his idea, he will forget everything pise. He will no longer see anything save the thought which he has to manifest, the feehng of his heart which he has to communicate. His voice, which just now was so tremulous and broken, will acquire assurance, authority, bril- liancy; if he is rightly inspired that day, if light from on high beams in his intelligence and warms his soul, his eyes will shoot light- ning, and his voice the thunderbolt ; his coun- tenance will shine like the sun, and the weak- nesfs of humanity wUl undergo its transfigur. ation. He will stand on the Mount Tabor of eloquence. ENTEANCH rCfTO SUBJECT. 247 CHAP. XXI. ENTEANCE INTO THE SUBJECT. After the exordium, which should clearly and briefly lay down the theme of the discourse, as well as its division, if there is occasion, the business must be entered upon and the develop- ment begun. This is perhaps the hardest part of extempo- raneous speaking, and that in which it oflfers most disadvantages. The point is to get out of harm, and there is but a narrow passage which it is easy to miss. A favourable wind is neces- sary to waft you into the open sea. Many are wrecked in this passage, and know not how to get out into the open sea of their subject. In writing you have time for reflection, and can arrange at leisure the sequence of your ideas. Nevertheless, everybody knows what trouble this arrangement often coBts, and how great the perplexity is in catching the exact thread of b4 248 ENTRANCE INTO SUBJECT. tmravelment, and in distinguishing amidst seve ral ideas that which commands the rest and will open a way for them, as a principle has its consequences and a cause its effects. Some- times whole hours are consumed in seeking the end of the chain, so as to unroU it suitably, and too often, as when trying to disentangle a skein of thread, you proceed awkwardly and you complicate, instead of unravelling. This is one of the chief annoyances of those who want to write, especially in the period of impatient, fancy-ridden youth, when one readily mistakes whatever glitters or produces effect, for the main point and the thing essential. A rare sagacity, or else much reflection and matureness are requisite to catch, at the first glance, the true serial connexion of ideas, and to put everything in its right place, without groping and without unsuccessful trials. What then, if you must decide on the spot, without hesitation, without being able " to try," before an audience, which has its eyes riveted upon you, its ears intent, and its expectation eagerly awaiting the words that are to fall from your lips? The slightest delay is out of the question, and you must rush into the arena, ENTKANCE INTO SXJBJEOT. 249 often but half accoutred or ill armed. The moment is come, you must begin to speak, even though you do not exactly know what you are going to say, nor whether what you shall gay will lead precisely to the passage which leads into the open sea. There is here a critical instant for the orator, an instant which will decide the fate of his discourse. No doubt he has prepared the sequence of his thoughts, and he is in possession of his plan. But this plan comprises only the leading ideas stationed widely apart, and in order to reach the first station from the starting point, there is a rush to make and an aim to take, and therein lies the difficulty. The best way is to go with resolution straight to the heart of your subject, the main idea, and to disembowel it, so to speak, in order to get forth its entrails and lay them out. But a man has not always the courage and the strength ; besides which, Le is afraid of being deficient in materials if he makes short work with his exposition, and thus of breaking down after a while, without having tilled up the time assigned or run his due eourse. This is a common illusion among be- ginners. They are always in dread of wanting 3- ) ENTRANCE INTO SUBJECT. BiLJicient materials, and either in their plau, ot in their discourse, they heap up all manner of things, and end by being lengthy, diffuse, and confused A man is never short of materials, when he is in the true line of his development. But he must strike the rock with the rod of Moses, and above all he must stiike it as God has commanded ia order that the waters may gush from it in an exhaustible stream. When the nuner has touched the right lode, wealth abounds. Unfortunately, things do not always happen thus. Too often one takes the first path that offers to reach the main idea, and that path ia not always the straightest nor the clearest. Once in the way, with eyes bent towards the point of destination, a man plies, not indeed the oars, but words, in order to attain the idea, and he attains it only by circuitous and tortuous efforts. The hearer who is following you does not very well see whither you are leading him, and if this position continues for a little longer, the discomfort of the speaker gains upon the listeners, and a coldness is dif fiised with the uneasiness among the assembly. Have you at times contemplated fi-om the ENTteANCE INTO SUBJECT. 251 shore a white sail striving to leave the road- stead, and by the wind's help to gain the offing? it tacks in all directions, to gain its object, and when baulked, it flutters inwards and oscUlatea without advancing, until at last the favourable breeze distends it, and then it passes swiftly over the waters, enters upon the open sea, and speedily vanishes below the horizon. Thus it is with the orator who misses his right course in the first instance. Eager to set out, because it would be discreditable to stand still, he hoists his sail to the first wind that blows, and pre- sently back it sinks with the deceitful breeze. He tries another course with as poor success, and runs the risk of either not advancing or of taking a wrong line. He then makes for the first image that presents itself, and it beguiles him far from his subject. He would fain re turn, but no longer knows his way. He sees his goal afar, eluding him, as Ithaca escaped Ulysses, and like Ulysses he may complete a very long Odyssey ere reaching it. Perhaps he will never get thither, and that is sadder stiU. There are persons who speak for a whole hour, within sight of their subject, and yet cannot manage to enter it. Sometimes, again, 252 ENTBANCE INTO 8Tin,TECT. they get at it when they ought to be taking leave of it — that is when their time is exhausted Hence interminable orations which tire the hearer without either instructing or moving him ; the orator wears himself out in uttei futility, and his toil is finiitless. He hag plunged into a quagmire ; the more he stmg" gles, the deeper he sinks ; he flounders right and left to find his road and recover solid ground, and if he gains it, it is covered all over with the mud through which he has waded. Horace says — "g-wi bene coepit, facti dimi- dium habet," " he who has begun well, has half done his work." This is perfectly applicable to the orator, who has well got into his matter, and who, after having clearly laid down his subject, attacks it fdU fi'ont, and takes up un- derstaudingly the thread of his ideas. He has then nothing to do but to suffer his skiff to float along ; the very current wiU carry it on to the destination, and the strokes of his oars, and the breeze in his sails, wiU be so many no- tessorial means of propulsion. But if he is out of the current, and still more, Lf he is against the current, should the breeze fail him or prove adverse, the more he rows the less he advances. ENTEANCE INTO SUBJECT. 253 He will lose time and trouble, and fill with aneasiness or with pity those who watch hire from the shore. But how begin well ? How find this thread of the deep water, this favourable current, or, to speak without metaphor, the leading idea by which a man should open, and which wiU bring after it the others ? Can a precept be given, a method prescribed for this end? No precept, no method, avails anything, except in so far as one knows how to apply them ; and in order to understand them rightly, and above all, in order to make use of them successfully, what we need is good sense, intelligence, and an un- warped, piercing mind. A man should be able to discern rapidly what is to be done in the case which we have just described, — ^he must know how to take advantage of the rising breeze which can help him, and how to extri- cate himself from the embarrassment in which he is involved. There is need, in short, for the orator, as for any other person who has tc face a danger or escape from a disadvantage, of both mind and presence of mind; — tilings nol lo 1)6 taught. 854 THE DKVELOrMENT. CHAP. xxn. THE DBVBLOPMENT. Tmb speaker should have his plan •well fixed, not only on paper, but in his head, so as t» keep evei present before his mind the chain of the thoughts, and so as to proceed successively from one to the other in the prescribed order of the exposition. The discourse, then, is mounted, as it were, in a frame from which it ought not to slip^ under pain of digressing and diverting, by its deviations, the attention of the hearers from the subject, as a river which overflows its bed sweeps away whatever it meets, and spreads dearth and ruin where it ought to have dif- fused refreshment and fertility. Or to speak more properly, the discourse £ language, Burprise hun by ideas more or less ingenious, nay amuse him, for a moment, by the wit and sparkle of your expressions; but you will not Bivggest one idea to his mind nor instil a single feeling into his ear, because there wiU be neither order nor unity, and therefore no life in your discourse. It is further essential to beware of the dis- tractions which may break the thread of the exposition, and abruptly send the mind into a totally different and an unprepared channel This is another of the dangers attending extem porisation, which imperatively demands that you should give yourself whoUy to your sub- ject, and thus exclude from your mind every txtraneous image and thought ; — no easy task, when a man stands face to face with a nume- rous assembly, whose ^es from all directions are centred upon him, tempting him to look at people, were it only because people are all looking at him. On this account it is necessary that the oratoi before speaking should be collected, — he should be wholly absorbed in his ideas, and pi oof against ihe interrupticns and impressions which sii'^ S 258 THE DEVELOPMENT. round him. The slightest diBtraetion to which he yields may break the chain of his thoughts, mar his plan, and even sponge out of his mind the very rememhrance of his subject itself, , This appears incredible, and I would not be- lieve it myself had I not experienced it. One day, I had to preach in one of the prin- cipal churches of Paris. It was a solemn fes- tival, and there was an immense audience, in- cluding part of the Court then reigning. As I was ascending the pulpit I perceived a person whom I had supposed absent, and my mind was carried away suddenly by a train of recollec- tions. I reached the pulpit-landing, knelt down as usual, and when I should have risen to speak, I had forgotten not only my text, but even the subject of my sermon. I hte- raUy knew no longer what I had come to speak ■ upon, and, despite of aU my efforts to re- member, it, I could see nothing but one com- plete blank. My embarrassment and anguish may be conceived. I remained on my knees a little longer than was customary, not knowing what to do. Nevertheless, not losing head or heart, I looked full at my danger without being geared by it, yet without seeing how I was ta THE DEVELOPMENT. 25S get out of it either. At last, unable to recovei anytmng by my own proper strength, — neither subject nor text, — I had recourse to God, and I said to Him, from the very bottom of my heart and with all the fervour of my anxiety, — " Lord if it be Thy will that I preach, give me back my plan;" and at that instant, my text came back into my mind, and with my text the subject. I think that never in my life have I experienced anything more astonishing, nor a more lively emotion of gratitude. At other times, and this often happens, you lose while speaking the thread of your dis- course, especially when some new idea crosses, or if you allow yourself to begin looking about among the audience. You generally become aware of it ere the sentence you are utter- ing is finished ; for when you extemporise, you always see the next idea before you have done with its predecessor, and in order to advance with certainty you must look somewhat for- ward, in order to discern where you are going to plant your foot presently. Suddenly, you can see nothing before you, and y (u are coma to the closing member of your period. If you then become agitated, you are lost ; for anxiety 260 THE DEVELOPMENT. far from enabling you to recover your ideas, confuses them still more, and the more disturbed you get, the less capable are you of retrieving your plan and re-entering the road. In these cases, you must calmly, under another form, with other phrases, resume the same thought you have just expressed, and nearly always it recalls that which was lost ; it gently excites the remembrance of it, by viitue of the associa- tion of ideas and of the previous elaboration of the plan. But while yet speaking, you must look inwards with the whole sight of your mind, in order to discern what this species of con- juration shall evoke, and at the shghtest sign to grasp your idea once more. All this is not effected without perplexity or without interior tribulation. There are untoward days, when one is scarcely master of one's attention, and in spite of the most laborious preparation the plan re- fuses to fix itself in the head, or to stay there, escaping on one side or on other, as in a sieve ; or else something comes across which throws you out of your way. It is often the effect of some physical cause ; — a nervous or a feverish state, arising from atmospheric THE DETRf-OPMEMT. 26.1 influences, from the body's or a single bodilj organs, indisposition, and above all from ans- ieties of heart or of mind. In such cases there is much diflJculty in entering upon one's plan or in keeping to it. Sometimes, indeed, one does not enter into it at all, and one speaks at the side of it, so to say, trying to catch it, and unable to overtake it 80 as to settle oneself therein, like a man who runs after the conveyance which was to have carried him, and who reaches the door without being able to open it and take his seat. This js one of the most fatiguing situations with which I am acquainted. It exhausts alike the will, the mind, and the body ; — the will, which makes vain endeavours to recapture a subject pei-petually evading it ; the mind, which strug- gles in a desperate wrestle with its own thoughts; and the body, which travails and sweats, as if to compensate by exterior agi- tation for the interior activity which is de- ficient. For the greatest possible avoidance of dis- tractions, I will recommend a thing which I have always foimd successful — that is, net to oontemplate the individuals who compose the 362 THE DEVELOPMEKT. audience, and thus not to establ-sh a speciSR understanding with any one of them. Tht short-sighted have no need of my recommen dation, but it will be useful to those who se« far, and who may be disturbed by some sudder impression or some movement of curiosity. As for myself I carefully avoid aU ocular contact with no matter whom, and I restrict myself to a contemplation of the audience as a whole, — keeping my looks above the level of the heads. Thus I see all, and distinguish nobody, so that the entire attention of my mind rem<»ms fas- tened upon my plan and my ideas. I do not, however, advise an imitation of Bourdaloue, who closed his eyes while de- livering his sermon, lest his memory should fail, or some distraction sweep away part of his discourse. It is a great disadvantage to shut the eyes while speaking; for the look and its play are among the most effectual means of oratorical action. It darts fire and light, it radiates the most vital energy, and people un- derstand the orator by looking at him ant' following the play of his eyes almost as well as by listening to his voice and words. nSISIS OF THE DISCOUESE. 2flS CHAP. xxm. THB CKISIS OF THE DISCOUESE. [ GIVE this name to the moment when the speech produces its highest eflfect, by piercing and mastering the hearer's soul either with the light which it imparts, or the feelings which it arouses. The listener ia at that solemn instant won, and remains passive under the influence which touches and vivifies. But in order to understand this state, it is necessary to con- sider closely, and in their respective relations, the two poles which speaking instantaneously unites for the achievement of its end. Eloquence has this peculiarity which distin- guishes it from other arts, that it is alwayg through the intelligence it reaches the heart, — that is, it is by means of the idea which '-t en- genders or gives birth to ; and this is what makes it the most excellent, the most protound s4 264 CEIBI8 OF THE DISCOUESE. of arts, because it takes possession of the whole man and can neither charm, nor move, nor bear him along, except by enlightening him and caiisuig him to think. It is not a matter of mere sensibility, imagination, or passion, as in music and painting, which may produce great effects without thought having a predominant share in them, although those arts themselves have a loftier and a wider range in proportion as the intelligence plays a greater part, and ideas exercise a higher sway in their operations. Yet in music and in the plastic arts, ideas are BO blended with form and so controlled by it, that it is very difficult to abstract them from it, with a view of testing their value and ana- lysing them ; they flow with the form which is their vehicle, and you could scarcely translate them into any intelligible or precise language. Hence the vagueness of these arts, and particu- larly of music; a fact which does not prevent it from exercising a powerful effect at the very moment of the impression, which, however, is transient, and leaves little behind it. It vanishes almost as soon as the sounds which have produced it cease. In eloquence, on the contrary, the form is OBISIS OP THE DISCOTJESE. 265 Bnbordinate to the idea. In itself it possefsaeE little to dazzle or to charm, — ^it ia articulate language, which certainly is fer less agreeable than language sung, or melody. Howevei sonorous the voice of the speaker, it mil never charm the ear like a musical passage, and even the most graceful or the most energetic orato- rical action can never have the elegance, har- mony, or finish which the painter or the sculptor is able to give to the bodies of the characters whom he represents. Notwith- standing which the tones and action of the speaker often produce astonishing effects on those who hear him, which are lost in reading vrhat he has said, or in his written discourse. It follows that eloquence has its own artistic or aesthetical side, besides that idea which it is its business to convey. But it relies much more on the idea than do the other arts, so that the absence or the feebleness of the idea ia much more felt in it, and it is impossible to bo a great orator, without possessing a lofty intel- ligence and great power of thought; whereas a man may be a distinguished musician, painter, or sculptor without any brilliant share of the-e endowments ; which amounts to this, that elo- 366 0EISI8 OF THE DIS00UE8E. qiienoe is the most intellectual of the arts, and whose exorcise requires the mightiest faculties of the mind. Whence, again, it follows, — and it is to this Wti would come, — that eloquence is the pro- foundest and the most difficult of arts, oa account of the end at which it aims, which ie not merely to charm, please, or amuse, tran- siently, but to penetrate into the soul, that it may move and change the will, ma)' excite or may prevent its action by means of the ideas which it engenders, or, as it is expressed in rhetorical treatises, by convincing and pci-- suading. The true end of the orator is to make himself master of souls, guiding them by his mind, causing them to think as he thinks, and thus imparting to their wills the movements and direction of his own. I well know that the multitude may be stirred and carried away by fine phrases, by brilliant images, and above all by bursts of voice and a vehement action, without any great amount of ideas at the root. The orator, iu this instance, acts after the manner of music, which produces feelings and sometimes deeds, without thoughts. But what is sufficient hi CRISIS OF THE DISCX^rKSE. i367 mndo 13 at the very utmost but half of what eloquence requires, and although it may indeed produce some effect in this way, it remains be neath itself and loses in dignity. It is sonorom bxit empty ; it is a sounding cymbal, or, if the oomparison be liked better, it is a scenic deco- ration, which produces a momentary iUu^on, and leaves little behind it. Eloquence is not worthy of its name, and fulfils not its high vocation, except in so £ur as it sways the human wUl by intelligence, deter- mining its resolutions in a m.^uiner suitable to a nrtional and free being, not by mere sensible impressions, or by sivUies of passion, but above «n, by the aspect of truth, by convictions of what is just and right, that is, by the idea of them which it gives, or rather, which it ought to engender, develope, and bring to life in the soul. In a word, everything in the discourse is reducible to this point — that the hearer shcuKl be made to conceive what the orator under- stands, and as he understands it, in order that he may feel what the orator feels and will what ke wiUs ; in other words, that an idea should ba ensrendered in the nnderstandiac of Uie heard tJEISIS OF THE DISOOITRSE. 209 ftiid SO to fix it that he shall listen witlioul eflFort, and even with pleasure to what is 8aid_ opening his mind for its reception and ahsorp' tion, to the exclusion of all other thought, image, or sensation which may arise. Now this capture of mind by a discourse is no easy matter, and it sometimes requires a considerahle time and sustained exertions to obtain it. At other times, it is effected at once, at the first words, whether on account of the confidence inspired by the speaker, or of the lively interest of the subject and the curiosity which it ex- cites, or for whatever reason else. It is hard to give a recommendation in this respect, seeing the great diversity of circumstances which may in this case exercise a favourable or an adverse in- fluence ; but this we may safely assert, that you must attain this point in order to produce any impression by your speech. There are few who know how to listen; it presupposes a great desire for instruction, and therefore a consciousness of one's ignorance, and a certain mistrust of one's self, wliich springs from modesty or humility, — the rarest of virtues. Besides, listening demands a certain strength of will, which makes a person capabl* 270 CEI8I8 or THE DI8C0UEBE. of directing the miad to one point and there keeping it despite of every distraction. Even when you are alone with a serious hook, what troahle you have in concentrating your atten- tion so as to comprehend what you are reading. And if the perusal he protracted, what a num- her of things escape and have to he read over again ! What will it not he, then, in the midst of a crowd in which you are assaUed on all hands hy a variety of impressions ? Besides, each individual comes with a dif. ferent disposition, with different anxieties or with prejudices in proportion to age, condition, and antecedents. Imagine several hundreds, several thousands, of persons in an audience, and you have as many opinions as there are heads, as many passions as there are interests and situations, and in all this great crowd few agree in thoughts, feelings, and desires. Each muses on this matter or on that, desires one thing or another, has such or such preposses- sions ; when lo ! in the midst of all these diver- gences, of all these contrarieties, I rise, a man, mount pulpit or platform, and have to make all attend in order to make aU think, feel, and win, just as I do. Truly it is a stupen- CRISIS CF THE DISCOUESE. 271 doua task, and one whicli cannot be acliie-ved except by a power almost above humanity. Rhetoricians say that the exordium should be devoted to this purpose. It is at the outset that you should endeavour to captivate tha mind and to attach it to the subject, either b"v forcibly striking it by surprise, as in the exor. dium ea abmpto, or in dexterously winning good wiU, as in the exordium " of insinuation." All this is true, but the precept is not easy to reduce to practice. It is tantamount to saying that in order to make a good begin- ning a great power, or a great adroitness, in speaking is required. Who shall give us this? The first moments of the discourse are gene- rally very difficult to the orator, not only on account of the trouble he experiences in setting out, in laying down and developing his subject, as we just now showed, but also on account of the necessity of making his audience set out; and here he meets at starting, either the re- Bistance of inertness, the indolence loth to take the pains of Ustening, or else the levity which flies off each instant, or else the latent or the express opposition of some adverse prejudice 273 cEiRis or niri discodebe. or interest. He has, therefore, to wrestle "^hl his hearer in order to overcome him, and ic this he is not always successful. Until everybody has taken his place and settled himself well in it, and then has coughed, cleared his throat, blown his nose, and made a stir as long as he decently can in his situation, the poor orator speaks more or less in the midst of noise, or at least of a half-repressed disturb- ance, which hinders his words, at first, from having any eflfect upon the mind. They pene- trate nowhere, they return to him, and he is tempted to give way to discouragement, es- pecially in large assemblies where there are all sorts of people, as at a sermon. If he waver, lie is undone, he will never become master of his hearers, and his discourse will be powerless. What will sustain him is, first of all, a lively sense of the mission intrusted to him, of the duty he has to fulfil, — and, in the next place, that something which is peculiar to the strong man, and by which he derives excitement from opposition or difiiculty, and enthusiasm fi-om the strife. The more resistance they meet, the more they endeavout to prevail, the more they ilesire victory ; — it is one of valour's spurs in CBiaiS OF THE DISOOrBSE. 273 the conflict. Again, what is very useful to him ui this emergency is the authority of speech which soon asserts a kind of ascendency ovei the hearer, — a sympathetic something in the voice which pleases the ear and reaches the heart, or else a certain pungency of pronuncia- tion and accent which wins the attention. By these means, and those of which we he- fore spoke, and above all by help from on high, you succeed more or less quickly in seizing upon your audience, in commanding it, in win- ning it, in chaining it, so to say, to your dis- course, so tliat all minds, rallying in a common attention, converge towards a single point, and appear to hang on the speaker's lips, while all eyes are fixed upon him. Then is established that solemn stillness upon which the life of speaking is conditional. No more fidgetings on chair or bench; no more nose-blowing, no Tnore throat-clearing ; even colds are cured as if by magic, and in the absence of all noisy .lounds, there is nothing to be heard save the respiration of the audience, and the voice of the orator, as it arises, prevails, and diffuse" itselt The assembly is won — it listens. Secondly. — Now alone can be achieved the T 874 CKIBIS OF THE D18COTJE8E. task of eloquence, -which is to engendei in th« hearer the requisite idea, so as to make hiro conceive and feel what it enunciates. Here, as in all conceptions, there are two poles, the one active, which transmits life, the other passive, which conceives by admitting it ; and conception is effected by their interpene- tration. Such is the operation when all looks are bent, strained, towards the orator, every miad is open to welcome and absorb his words with aU its powers, and those words sink into and fertilise it by their virtue. It is thus that ideas are produced by instruction, which is a real fertilisation and a nourishment of the in- teUigenoe ; for " man lives not by bread alone, but by every word of truth." This is the most momentotis period of the discourse, what we term the crisis, or supreme effort of speaking ; it is truth itself it is He who calls Himself " the way, the truth, and the life," who, by the mouth of his minister, or of some man of his choice, acts upon the soul, pierces it, and makes a settlement therein, that it may become as a throne where He loves to Bit, as a sanctuary which He is pleased to in habit, as a mirror in which He reflects Himself CEISIS OF THE DISCOmJSK 275 frith predilection, as a torch by which Ha desires to shine and to diffuse his light. In the physical world wherever there is tho communication and reproduction of life, it is also the Living God who acts; whereas the men, the animals, and the plants which are employed in this great operation, are merely organs and implements in the work. This is why the gospel declares that there is but one Father, He from whom aU paternity is derived in heaven and on earth ; as He alone is good, because He is the source of every good, and He alone is Master and Lord, because He ia truth. It is just the same, and for still greater reason, in the moral world, or in the communi- cation of intellectual life. It is an operation performed according to the same laws, — and on this account, he who instructs or eflfects a mental genesis (the true meaning of the word "instruct"), — ^that person also is a father in- tellectually, and it is the noblest and most pro- lific species of paternity. Such is the sublime mission of the orator, Biich the high function which he discharges. When he circulates a living word, it is a tran» T 2 276 CEISIS OJ? THE UISCODEBE. mission of life, it is a reproduction and uiulll plication of truth in the souls of others whom he intellectually vivifies, as a fether his off- spiing accordhig to the flesh. As He whose image and instrument he is, diffuses His light, wannth, and life over all creatures, so the orator, filled with inspiration, instils upon the spot into thousands of hearers the light of his word, the warmth of his heart, and the life of his soul. He fertilises all these intelligences at once ; and this is why, as soon as the rays jf his discourse have entered them and im- partbO. to them the new conception, they make but one soul with him, and he is master of that Boul, and pours into it virtue from on high. They all live in unison at that important moment, identified by the words which have mastered them. This critical instant of the discourse, when the supreme effort of eloquence is achieved, is accordingly marked by the profoundest emotion of which men are susceptible, that which always attends the communication of life, and in this case by so much the more replete with happi- ness as the life of the intellect is more pure, iind less remote from Him who is its source. CEI8I8 OF THE DISCOUESE. 271 £I(!nce that exquisite feeling, to which no other 18 to be compared, which the orator experiences wlien his words enter into and vivify the minds of his audience; and hence also the sweet im pressions of which these last are conscious when they receive the spirit of the word and by it are nourished. Thirdly. — ^When the orator has thus pene- trated into the hearer's soul by the radiation of his speech, animating that soul with its life, he be- comes master of it, impresses, moves, and turns it at will, without effort, in the simplest maimer, by a word, a gesture, an exclamation, nay silence itself. The fact is, he possesses the hearer's heart; it is open to him, and there is between them an intimate communication which haa scarcely any further need of exterior means. Thus it is with two persons who love each other dearly, and who have confidence in each other; they understand each other, without speaking, and the feeling which animates and unites them is so intimate and so sweet that language is powerless to express it, and they need it no longer to make themselves mutuall-y understood. Everything, then, is in the orator's powoi T 3 278 OEI8IS OF THE DISCOUESB. when he has thus -won his audience, and he ought to take advantage of this power which ia given to him temporarily, to complete his work, and to develope and organise in the minds of tho listeners the idea to which he has given birth ; this is the third stage' of his undertaking. Strike the iron while it is hot, says the pro- verh. In the present instance there is something more than iron and better than iron to forge and fashion ; there is the young life which elo- quence has called forth to develope, in order that the conceived idea may take shape in the understanding, and influence the will — ^partly through the emotion which it has produced, and partly through the intellectual views which furnish the will with motives, as feeling and passion supply it -with incentives. Eloquence would miss its aim, if it failed to lead the hearer to some act by which the idea is to be realised. It is in this last stage, then, that the prac- tical part of the discourse should be placed along with the application of deductions. In Vhese must the speaker reap the fruits of hig labour. After having imparted his feelings and thoughts to the listener, he must also maka them partakers of his will. He must imprint CEI8I8 OF THE DISOOUESE. 279 his personality upon them, fashion them in his resemblance, so that they shall feel, think, and will as he does, in the interest of that truth and excellence of which he has brought home to them the manifestation. He must not take leave of his audience till he has touched, con- vinced, and carried it away. It is in the pero- ration, as we are about to see, tnat xbe seal uiust be set lo the work, and that it musi receiva its plenary completeness. 880 IHB CONCLUSION. CHAP. XXIV. THK rxOSB OF THE DISCOTIESIS, UA PEEOEATIOIf. Ii' it is difficult to begin, when one extemporisee^ it is stUI more difficult to finish — that is, to finish well. Most orators spoil their speeches by lengthiness, and prolixity is the principal disadvantage of extemporaneous speaking. In it, more than in any other, one wants time to bo brief, and there is a perpetual risk of being carried away by the movement of the thoughts or the expressions. It sometimes happens, unfortunately, that you are barely into your subject when you should end; and then, with a confused feeling of all that you have omitted, and a sense of what you might still say, you are anxious to recover lost ground in some degree, and you begin some new development when you ought to be cod THE OONCLtlSlON. 281 eluding. This tardy, and unseasonable, yet crude after-growth has the very worst effect upon the audience which, already fatigued, be- comes impatient and listens no longer. The speaker loses his words and his trouble, and everything which he adds by way of elucidat- ing or corroborating what he has said, spoils what has gone before, destroying the impres- sion of it. He repeats himself unconsciously, and those who still listen to him follow him with uneasiness, as men watch from shore a bark which seeks to make port and cannot. It is a less evil to turn short round and finish ab- ruptly than thus to tack incessantly without advancing. For the greatest of a speaker's mis- fortunes is that he should bore. The bored hearer becomes almost an enemy. He can no longer attend, and yet, at that mo- ment, he is unable to think of anything else. His mind is like an overladen stomach which requires rest, and into which additional aliment is thrust despite of its distaste and repugnance ; it needs not much to make it rise, rebel, and disgorge the whole of what it has received. An nnseasonible or awkward speaker inflicts a 282 THE CONOLUSION. downright torture on those who are compelled to hear Lim, a torture that may amount to sick- ness or a nervous paroxysm. Such is the state into which a too lengthy discourse, and, above all, a never-ending peroration, plunge the au- dience.. It is easy to calculate the dispositions which it inspires and the fruit it produces. Sometimes — and I himihly confess that I here speak from experience — ^the orator is still more unfortunate, if that were possible. He wants to finish, and no longer knows how, like a man who seeks to quit a house in danger, and finds all the doors shut ; he runs right and left to discover an escape, and strikes against dead walls. Meanwhile time presses, and the im- patience of the public betrays itself by a re- pressed disturbance, some rising to go away, some moving on their seats to relieve themselves, while a confused hum ascends towards the speaker, — a too certain token that he is no longer attended to, and that he is speaking to the air, which fact only increases his agitation and perplexity. At last, as everything has an end in this world, he reaches his conclusion sfter some fashion or other, and war- weary. THE CONCLUSION. 283 either by catching hold of the common-placa wind-up about eternal life, should he be preach ing, or, under other circumstances, by soma {^anting period which has the air of expressing a feeling or a thought, and which in nine cases out of ten, fills the ear with sonorous and empty words. And thus the poor orator who could do better, and who is conscious that he has done ill, r'ltires, with lowly mien, much confused, and vowing, though rather late, that they shall not catcL him in that way any more. Alas 1 yet again, perhaps shall they so catch him, even after the most laborious preparation ; for there is nothing so fitful as eloquence. It needs but an omission, a distraction to break the thread of the ideas and launch you into void or darkness, and then you grope in a forest, or rather struggle amid a chaos. It is a true ora- torical discomfiture and rout ; and I have re- marked that it happens most when one is most sure of oneself and hopes to produce the greatest efiect. These are lessons which He, who exalts the humble and abases the proud, is pleased occasionally to give public speakers, so prone to be elated by succebs and to ascribe 284 THE OONCLtrSION. to themselves its credit and its glory. Happj are taey if they profit by them. There is a way of concluding which is the most simple, the most rational, and the least adopted. True, it gives little trouble and af- fords no room for pompous sentences, and that is why so many despise it, and do not even give it a thought. It consists merely of wind- ing up by a rapid recapitulation of the whole discourse, presenting in sum what has been de- veloped in the various parts, so as to enunciate only the leading ideas with their connec- tion; — a process which gives the opportunity of a nervous and lively summary, foreshort- ening all that has been stated, and making the remembrance and profitable application of it easy. And since you have spoken to gain some point, to convince and persuade your hearer, and thus influence his wiU by impressions and :;onsiderations, and finally by some paramount feeling which must give the finishing stroke and determine him to action, the epitome of the ideas must be itself strengthened, and, as it were rendered living by a few touching words, THK CONCLUSION. 2Sfi which inspirit tho foeliug in quostion at iho last moment, so that the couvinood ami sif- ibvjted audito'- shall be ready to do what he is required. Such, in my mind, is the best peroi-ation, because it is alike the most natural and the most efficacious. It is the straight aim of the disoom-se, and as it issues from the very bowels of the subject and from the direct intention of the speaker, it goes right to the soul of the listener and places the two in unison at the dose. I am aware that you may, and with suc^coss, adopt a different metliod of conclutiiiig, either by some pungent things whicJi you reserve for your peroration, .and whicli tend to m.'untain to the last and even to reawaken the attention of the audience ; or else by well-turned periods which flatter the ear and excite all sorts of foeUngs, more or less analogous to the subject, — • or in fine, by tmy other way. Undoubtedly there are cii'cimistances in which these orato- rical artifices lU'o in keeping, and may prove advantageous or agreeable; I do not reje<:t them, for in war all means, not condemned b^ 286 THE CONCLUSION. humanity and honour, and capable of procuring victory, are allowable, — and public speaking ia a real conflict; I merely depose that the sim- plest method is also the best, and that th« others, belonging more to art than to nature, are rather in the province of rhetoric than of true eloquence. rmS: DiacWtTRBK ENDED ?S'3 CHAP. XXV, AFTBB THE DISCOUBSB. It ehould seem as if all had been said, once the discourse is concluded ; and yet we will add a few words in the physical and moral interest of the speaker, we will point out to him various precautions which may appear fiitUe to certain persons, and may prove serviceable to others; at least we have always found our own account in having adopted them. On quitting the pulpit, the platform, or any other place where you have been speaking for a considerable time and with animation, you Bhould try to remain quiet for a while in order to recompose yourself gradually, and to allow the species of fever which has excited and con? Bumed you to subside. The head particularly needs rest, — for nothing is so fatiguing to it as extemporaneous speaking, which brings mto 8S8 THE DISCO CEfiK ESTDED. play all the faculties of the mind, strains then to the uttermost, and thus causes a powerful determination of blood to the braia. More- over, the nervous system, which is ancillary to it, is strongly agitated, — it requires tranquil- lising, — and the whole body, -violently exerted as it has been by the oratorical delivery, re- quires refreshment and repose ; and these, a slight doze, if it is possible to obtain one in a case of the sort, will afford better than any other means. The vocal organs which have just been ex- ercised to excess, ought to be kept unem- ployed ; and therefore great care should be taken, — ^if indeed the inconvenience can be avoided, — not to receive visits or hold conver- sations. In the fatigue of the moment, any new effort, however small, is prejudicial, and takes away more strength than the most vio- lent exertions at another time. The first thi n g to do in this state is to return thanks to God for the danger escaped, and for the help re- ceived, evan when you fancy that yoa have not achieved the success which you desire. Public speaking is so hazardous a thing, that ona never knows what will be the issue of it, and THE DISCOUESE K3SDED. 2 SO m nothing is asastance fi-om above so really necessary. He who feels the impoi-tance and the danger of speaking, who has any notion of what the orator ought to be, any notion of all that he needs to accomplish his task, the obstacles he most surmount, the difficulties he must over- come, and, on the other hand, how slight a matter suffices to overthrow or paralyse him^ — he who understands all this can well conceive also that lie requires to be breathed upon from on high m order to receive the inspiration, the light, fire, which shall make his discourse living and efficacious. For all life comes from TTim who is life itself life infinite, life eternal, inex- haustible, and the life of minds more still than of bodies, since God is spirit. It is but just, therefore, to pay TTim homage for what He has vouchsafed to give us, and to refer to TTim at the earliest moment the fimt or glory of what we have received. This is the more fitting, because there is nothing more intoxicating than the successes of eloquence; and in the elation which its power gives, owing to a consciousness of strength, and 'the visible influence which one is exercising over one's fellow-creatures, one is V 290 THE DISCOURSE ENDED. naturally prone to exalt oneself in one's own conceit, and to ascribe to oneself directly or indirectly, wholly or partially, the effect pro- duced. One should heware of these tempta- tions of pride, these illusions of vanity, which are invariably fatal to true talent. Within that measure, it is allowable to rejoice to a certain extent at what one has achieved, in the very great relief which is experienced after speaking. I know nothing equal to this sense of relie:^ especially when one thinks that the task has not been unworthily performed, — except the anguish felt before beginning a speech. The one is the consequence of the other; for the greatest joys of this world are always produced by the cessation of the greatest jroubles. First, there is a sort of infantine joy at being delivered from a difficult task, or disencumbered of a heavy burden. Labour weighs hard upon all the children of Adam, even on those who the most feel its necessity, and we instinctively shun it to the utmost. Besides which, rest after sharp fatigue is delicious, and particularly ifter the labours of the mind. Socrates, son of a midwife, uped to say that he continued the THE DI8COUE8E ENDED. 291 occupation of his mother; but it was m tho mental order, by means of his interrogatories and dialectics, and hence the eristic method. One may say, then, with the wisest of the Greeks, that the delivery of a discourse in public is the production of an intellectual off- spring ; and very fortunate it is when that off- spring is not dead or unUkely to live. To conceive an idea, to organise it in a plan vigo- rously meditated, and to carry this mental progeny for more or less time in the under- standing, and then when matured to give it to the light amidst the dangers and the throes of public speaking, this is an exertion which pro- duces immense relief and a very great satis- faction when it succeeds. And truly, how light one feels after a speech, and how comfortable the relaxation of mind and body after the ex- treme tension which has wrung all the springs and exhausted all the exertions of one's vital power ! None can know it, save him who hah experienced it. After this comes a feeling at once higher and deeper, that of duty accomplished, of a task honourably fulfilled, one of the sweetest joys of conscience, Finally, another feeling raises a2 293 THE DISCOrKSE ENDED. US in our own estimation even while iaspLrirg us with humility, that of being an instrunient of truth to make it known to men as &r as our weakness allows, and of having ^ven testimony to it at the cost of some sacrifices, or at least of our toil and sweat. You are never more closely united with Truth than when you are announcing it with conviction and devotedness. When you are called to proclaim it solemnly, it reveals itself or makes itself felt in a manner quite peculiar, and, as Bossuet says, with sudden Qluminations. He who instructs others in hearty and living language derives more profit than even those whom he teaches, and receives more lig ht than he imparts. This is why teaching is the best method of learning. From these mingled sentiments results a state full of sweetness, especially if you believe that you have succeeded, and in general your own feeling does not deceive you in this respect. Still, illusion is possible, whether for good or iU, because the true orator, who always needs inspiration, never has a very clear consciousness of what he has done, or rather of what has been done by him. Gtod alone, who inspires him, iUnmines the minds THB IiISCOUKSE ENDED. 293 of the hearers by Hid light, and changes their hearts by his grace. Now God frequently employs the weakest instruments, apparently, to touch the soul, as He has renewed the fece of the world by what, in the eyes of human wisdom, were the meanest and most foolish of mankind. Thus, a discourse with which a speaker is dissatisfied, because it has feUen short of hia ideal and of his plan, has produced a profound impression and has subjugated every listener; whereas anothei", with which he was delighted and which he thought highly effective, has produced nothing save his own fruitless exulta- tion, and too often an augmentation of his vain-glory. Here, as in everything, the Al- mighty is absolute : — He sports with the desires, efforts, and oi>inion8 of men, and makes them instrumental, according to His good pleasure, in the manifestation of truth, and the promo- tion of the designs of His justice or His mercy. Let no speaker, then, too much disquiet himself as to the effect he may have pjoduced and the results of his discourse; let him leave all this in the hands of God, whose organ he u, and let hun beseech Him to make soma 294 THE DISCOUBSE ENDED. thing accrue from it to His glory, if succeM has been achieved; or if he has had the mi* fortune to fail, to make good out of this evil come, as it belongs to the Divine Power to do, and to that power alone. Above all, let him not canvass this person and that inquisitively concerning what their feelings were in hearing him, and their opinion of his discourse and his manner. All such questions seek a motive for self-love, rather than any useful hints; they are an indirect way of going in quest of praise and admiration, and may be carried to a very abject extent, iu order to get oneself consideration, criticising one's one performance merely to elicit a con- trary verdict — ^tricks and subterftiges of vanity, which begs its bread in the meanest quarters, and which in its excessive craving for flattery, challenges applause and extorts eulogy. This wretched propensity is so inborn in human nature, since original sin, that frequently the greatest orators are not proof against this littleness, which abuses them in the eyes of God and man. Besides, it is a way of exposing oneself to cruel disappointments. At length when the speaker is sufEcientlj THE DISCOURSE ENDED. 29E rested, and has become id ore cabn, next day for instance, let him review his plan while his recollections are still new, in order to correct and perfect it by the side of what he has actually said, either rectifying the snccession of the ideas, if necesssuy, or adding those which have occurred to him while speaking. It wDl be so much gained for some future speech on the same plan. If the discourse has been really successful, and he feels inclined, let him write according to his plan as he has spoken, and thus he will compose a finished, after having delivered an extemporaneous, production. Great oratore have in this manner writen several of their orations subsequently, — Cicero, Bossuet, and others. In this case, the surest method is to have a short-hand writer who shall supply yon with the whole of what you have said, and whose reports you can rewrite, yet so rewrite as to preserve whatever vivid or striking things the spoken words possessed. This is a labour which we have often exe> cuted, always with advantage, and never with- out a feeling of humility. For imles.*' you have verified it, you cars hardly form an ide« TUE DliCOUKSE ESDED. how wretched upon paper looks the most easj tie most elegant extemporaneous address, evec tl.:.: which produced the greatest efect at the moment itself; and ho^r very mach it admits of improTement in point of style and reaiitlencss. That is why orators of mark, and even of the highest order, whose qtirrering and action- heated eloquence moves and - overcomes any assembly, vanish, as it were, on being pemsed ; so that on seeing the reckoning of their eitem- poraneons harangues, divested of the accents of their voice, the play of their {.hysiognomy. and their gestitres, you ask yourself with am:izeaient how such a disoo.ir^^ could have produced an effect so wondrous. It is that speaking and writing are not the same thing; people do not write as they speak, and fre- quently he who speaks the best knows nothrg about writing, just as the ablest writer is net always capable of speaking. Our modest task is over: for we had. we .peat, no pretension of compassing a treatisa on the art of speaking; our single obje<;t was to transfer the results of our experience to those whose calling it is to speak iu public. These very ample counsels, we hope, may coNCLrsioN. 297 prove useful to some, either by sparing them trials which are always painful, even when they are productive of fruit, or by showing them a more easy process than their own or a surer way. However this may be, we warn them at parting that those alone can derive any benefit from our remarks, who shall have received from nature the gift of eloquence, and whom God, who is the Word by pre-eminence, shall assist by His grace in the management of this for- midable weapon, this two-edged sword, for the manifestation of truth, the fulfilment of His designs among men, and tba renewal of th« world. CHAP, XXVI. TEX LOGIC OF TKB OBATOB. IP the reader fancy that we are about to a&semble before Mm a formidable body of scholastic rules, and to enter the labyrinth of the Aristotelian Logic, we beg him to dismiss the apprehension. Our purpose is far simpler, and is limited to set- ting forth in an unpretending way those turns and connections of reasoning which, consciously or unconsciously, the public speaker is called upon to employ. Something of this detailed and exemplified character seems requisite to the Anierican student, as an append to the sugges- tive and eloquent work of Monsieur Bautaio, We shall be strictly practical in both plan and execution, and when we adopt authorities the reader may rely upon it that good ones are fol- lowed, whether cited or not, in their own laiir guage. LOGIC OF IHK OKATOE. 296 We confine ourselves to Logic so far as it con cerns the orator, and we go no step further. The examples chosen shall be from spoken, argu- mentative productions, and the nomenclature that which has the sanction of past and present use. All beyond this, lies outside of our plan. Yet so connected are aU cognate subjects of thought and investigation that a familiarity with the principles of reasoning as here stated and ap- plied, will not fail to introduce the reader, if the study be new or obscure to him, to the science at large. With this advantage, that the direct and positive examples he will meet with, taken from actual occasions and relating to immediate interests, wiU have iniiised a vitality which is not found ia the Tree of Porphyry, and which is want- ing to the mere verbalities of scholasticism. No- thing of the kind here attempted, has yet Mien in our way, and believing that a desideratum exists which ought to be supplied, we now pro- ceed in the attempt to supply it. The object of all public speaking, where logic prevails, is to ca/rry some point or other: to establish some proposition, either opposed, or not. AU evidence — and consequently all proof— 18 built upon the idea of a connection betwees 300 LOGIC OF THE OEATOE. that which is asserted and that which ought to be conceded; to wit, the point to be carried. What this connection is, and whether it exists or not, is a question of special knowledge — there« fore " get knowledge." The orator's logic does not furnish that; it does show him. how to use it to advantage. The Enthymeme is the orator's form of argu- ment. It is an elliptical statement of his reason- ing. One of his propositions is held back in his mind — such is the Uteral meaning of the term — the other two, only, are expressed. For such is the mysterious process (to employ one of Mon- sieur Bautain's similitudes), of mental generation — there must be three terms, three propositions, three thoughts in the act of reason. The first two by their union engender the third. Take an example : The philosopher might dis- course thus formally, 1. We ought to love what renders us mor« perfect. 2. Now literature renders us more perfect, 3. Therefore we ought to love literature. Deny the first proposition, and the argument fails ; its major premiss is gone. Deny the seo I.OGIC OP TlliJ OKATOR. 30i oiud, it again fails : its minor premiss has disap peared. But grant both, and the third, the con- elusion, stands firm. This slow mode of statement suits not, how- ever, the fervid movement of the orator. He exclaims, " Who is it that loves not letters f They enrich the understanding, and refine the manners ; they polish and adorn humanity. Self- love and good sense themselves endear them to us, and engage us in their cultivation." Zeno said that the philosophic argument is like the human hand closed, the oratorical like the same hand unfolded. When argumentation is linked in a chain, it is called a Sorites. Public discourse, from time to lime, makes use of it. A playful example is seen when the Thracians let loose a fox on a frozen river to try the ice. Renard put his ear down, and seemed to say, " Whatever makes a noise moves ; what moves is not frozen hard ; that which is not hard is liquid ; liquid will bend nndei weight ; therefore, if I perceive, close to my ear, the sound of water, it is not frozen, and the ice is too weak to bear me." The Thracians saw Renard stop, then retreat when he heard tli« lound of the water. S02 LOGIC OF THE OBATOB. The Epichirema is but an involved syllogisn\ or regular argument. Example : 1. Whatever destroys trade is ruinous to Great Britmn (bec3use it deprives the laborer of his ordinary means of support, and reduces the source of the revenue). 2. War destroys trade (for it interrupts tha exportation of manufiictured articles). 3. Therefore, war is ruinous to Great Britain. Cicero caDs the Epichirema ratiocination. You see that it supports the chain of argument by subordinate proofe. It is reducible to the orator's purpose, as follows : " War is ruinous to Great Britain because it deprives the laborer,"