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Excerpt from The Principal Speeches of the Statesmen and Orators of the French Revolution, 1789-1795, Vol. 1: Edited With Introductions, Notes, and Indices; Mirabeau, Vergniaud, Gensonné, Guadet, Louvet, Cambon
This is not the place to trace the growth of eloquence in France from the pedantic days of the Middle Ages, when the rules laid down by Aristotle and Quintilian were in variably obeyed, through the epoch of the revival of classical learning, when Cicero's speeches were the recognized models, down to modern times, when every public speaker tries to create an individual manner of his own. It is enough to point out the three chief directions in Which French oratory was developed before the convocation of the States General in 1789, and to show the respective in¿uence of the three different styles in formin g the methods adopted by the famous speakers of the period of the French Revolution. These three varieties were pulpit, legal and academical oratory, each of which had a distinctive history and possessed its special characteristics.
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