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American Literature: Give Me Liberty or Give Me Death, But I'd Prefer Liberty 322 Views
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Description:
We’ll take one order of liberty, but hold the death.
Transcript
- 00:03
Give me liberty or give me death but i'd prefer Liberty.....
- 00:23
alright well meet Patrick Henry well he's dead so we can't really meet him [Person on a horse and Patrick Henry's grave appears]
- 00:28
but take a look at it one of the greatest orator in American history
- 00:32
second only to you know Ryan Seacrest what's an orator you asked well it's
- 00:38
someone who orates, obviously so well okay the root of the word is orate [Man reading orator book]
Full Transcript
- 00:42
which means to speak but not to just chat about the weather when you orate
- 00:47
you generally are talking to a live audience of people and your speech tends
- 00:52
to be elevated lots of big words five-dollar words fancy phrasings maybe
- 00:57
even a metaphor or two if you're feeling frisky plus the subject of your speech [Boy on stage talking]
- 01:01
is going to be something important so you might orate about the fact that
- 01:05
giraffes are going extinct this is bad or about the troubles of a struggling
- 01:11
economy this is really bad or about the fact that kesha has a successful singing [People protesting about Kesha]
- 01:16
career this is really really bad like a sign of the Apocalypse bad so yeah
- 01:21
people tend to listen when an orator especially a great orator speaks Patrick
- 01:26
Henry is definitely in the category of great orator's well he never became
- 01:30
president or commanded a victorious army or invented the cell phone and yet we [Henry speaking on a cell phone]
- 01:35
remember him and his words which by the way is why we're learning about this guy
- 01:39
in a literature class you might have read most of his writing aloud while
- 01:43
he was brilliant when it came to crafting a persuasive argument that's
- 01:48
why we're studying him in fact you might be able to learn a thing or two from him [About Patrick Henry book appears]
- 01:51
before beginning your next essay assignment.. anyway Henry is most
- 01:55
famous for the speech he gave at the second Virginia convention in 1775 for a
- 02:00
bunch of fuddy-duddies and powdered wigs gathered to discuss the possibility of
- 02:05
going to war with Britain but he's really famous for one line from that
- 02:09
speech in particular say it with me give me liberty or
- 02:13
give me death... so what did he mean and what's the big deal about this speech [Man discussing Henry's speech]
- 02:17
of his anyway well the Revolutionary War began shortly after the convention and
- 02:22
there's good chance that what Henry said in his speech motivated the colonists to
- 02:27
get off their trousers and rush into battle let's read the transcription of [Colonists walking into battle]
- 02:31
the speech in full and see if we can get to the bottom of Henry's death wish
- 02:35
unless you're the world's fastest reader you'll want to pound that pause key.
- 03:26
Let's use our stellar summarizing skills to simplify each paragraph and once we've
- 03:31
translated everything into basic english it'll make it easier to [Patrick Henry to english typed into shmoogle search bar]
- 03:34
understand and then we'll think about what Patrick Henry was trying to
- 03:37
accomplish and whether or not it worked well in the first paragraph Henry seems
- 03:41
to be prepping his audience letting them know he's about to throw down some truth [Henry holding truth dynamite]
- 03:45
whether they like it or not he says that different men often see the same subject
- 03:51
in different lights well so he's trying to propose his own view of America's
- 03:56
difficulties with an oppressive English rule you know all the stuff about
- 03:59
Britain celebrating a culture of obedience and submission to the King not [Lemonade stand whipped]
- 04:03
to mention their religious worship of tradition including the passing of power
- 04:08
along lines of family lineage rather than by you know ability but at the same [King drops dead and crown falls on crying baby's head]
- 04:13
time he's saying hey these other guys who just spoke before I did the ones who
- 04:17
don't think we need to go to war well they're entitled to their opinions which
- 04:22
are perfectly balanced but hear me out alright well he's basically making nice
- 04:26
he doesn't want to come right out and attack anyone individually because he
- 04:30
wants to sway people to his way of thinking not just a you know ruffle [Man swaying side to side]
- 04:35
their collars so he's setting the stage he goes so far as to say that withholding
- 04:39
his opinion would be equivalent to treason ie it's only because he loves
- 04:44
his country so much that he's willing to voice an unpopular opinion which would [Patrick Henry on a chopping block]
- 04:49
just about be grounds for execution across the pond in England okay second
- 04:53
paragraph here Henry suggests that it's time for everyone to open their eyes and
- 04:57
face the truth however unpleasant that truth might be he says we are apt to [Truth dynamite explodes]
- 05:03
shut our eyes against a painful truth well sure we've probably closed our eyes
- 05:08
and put our fingers in our ears when our preferred presidential candidate lost or [Person puts fingers in ears and close eyes]
- 05:14
when the object of our affection turned down our invitation to the prom
- 05:18
or when McDonald's discontinues the McRibwich
- 05:22
Henry argues that the choice the members of the convention are about to make [Henry speaking to an audience]
- 05:27
might not be the easiest decision but they are bound by their duty to their
- 05:32
fellow countrymen to make the right decision all right moving on in the
- 05:36
third paragraph Henry talks about how his experience and knowledge of the past
- 05:39
has guided him to his present conclusion that there is now no other answer to the
- 05:45
standoff with Great Britain's than war ...Okay so here's what Henry
- 05:50
speech has been leading up to until now he's only hinted at his position with [Man carries pizza to Patrick Henry]
- 05:54
regard to war but here he leaves no room for interpretation he uses some pretty
- 05:58
convincing arguments to sell his story what means this martial array of fits
- 06:04
purpose be not force us to submission well the martial array Henry's referring
- 06:09
to was an assembly of armed forces the British had been gathering well he's
- 06:13
saying look these guys aren't here for a dinner party obviously England is [Patrick Henry discussing England]
- 06:18
sending these dudes with guns to keep us in line which is no bueno, so it becomes
- 06:23
a matter of freedom if they don't act now and fight England while they still
- 06:26
can it might soon be too late.... moving on to the fourth paragraph Henry
- 06:30
presents some arguments as to why the time is right to engage with the Brits
- 06:34
now in short, colonists have the British outnumbered the colonists have the will
- 06:38
in other words they have more at stake considering they're very liberty and [Colonists carrying a flag]
- 06:42
lives are on the line and will battle more passionately than the Brits and oh
- 06:46
yeah they just happen to have God on their side plus the only alternative is
- 06:51
submission and slavery if they don't act now the English forces in the colonies
- 06:56
will grow too numerous and too powerful and their chance at freedom and liberty [English forces sailing to shore and colonists look shocked]
- 07:01
and all that will be gone all right moving on in the fifth and final
- 07:03
paragraph Henry presents his smart and sassy conclusion during his listeners to
- 07:07
action and of course finishing off with one of the most famous quotes in
- 07:11
American history give me liberty or give me death all right well what does that
- 07:15
line mean? well, we probably need to back up and delve into the preceding passages
- 07:20
first so let's do that..Well first the speech as a whole - what's its
- 07:23
purpose like I'm sure the guy loved to hear himself talk but surely there's [Henry looking into a mirror]
- 07:27
something more there well yeah in short he's speaking to a room full of people
- 07:32
many of whom don't believe war is the answer some of them might think
- 07:36
there's still room for diplomacy now maybe others feel you know they'd be [Soldiers pushing a canon]
- 07:41
outmatched and are afraid for their lives all that kind of basic stuff well
- 07:45
and maybe others are still holding on to the thin thread of hope that they're
- 07:48
about to wake up and discover the whole thing was just a dream whatever their [Man wakes up in bed and soldier appears]
- 07:53
reasons many of Henry's listeners needed a fire lit under their breeches to
- 07:56
convince them that it was just going to take up arms and Henry came prepared
- 08:00
with an oily rag and a whole can full of gasoline and cigarettes for everyone [Henry carrying cigarettes and can of gasoline]
- 08:05
metaphorically speaking of course even back then you know there were fire codes
- 08:08
one by one Henry presented the arguments he'd heard put forth by his many
- 08:12
dissenters and proceeded to rip them apart...Britain wasn't looking to
- 08:17
subjugate them ie keep them under control well then why are they
- 08:21
assembling these powerful militia forces well maybe we can try reasoning with them...
- 08:26
oh I've been there tried that but the situations got worse we petition
- 08:30
we grovelled, we begged none of it's doing any good well it isn't the right time to go
- 08:34
to war because we're not prepared enough yeah?....yeah well when are we ever going to
- 08:39
be prepared enough the Brits are going to bring more men more guns and a
- 08:42
longer we wait the slimmer our odds are going to get... Henry was smart methodical
- 08:46
but passionate at the same time, a tough combo to pull off... okay so now what
- 08:51
about that last line what did Henry mean when he said give me liberty or give me
- 08:55
death well clearly he's not quite two-face here getting ready to flip the [Two face flipping a coin]
- 08:59
coin Henry's not saying he wants to die what he is saying is that Liberty is
- 09:03
so important he's willing to die fighting for it if that's what it takes
- 09:07
rather than continue to live but without freedoms he holds dear right so yeah [Henry in a prison cell]
- 09:12
Henry drives it home in the bottom of the ninth inning by telling his audience
- 09:16
that their decision to go to war is literally a matter of life and death
- 09:20
it's just that death isn't necessarily the worst option on this table...
- 09:25
now why are we reading the speech and learning about this orator fella hundreds
- 09:29
of years after he got both liberty and death well first of all the [Man riding a horse]
- 09:33
revolutionary war hadn't happened you think you'd even be here it sort of
- 09:37
changed the course of history no and if it wasn't for Henry the colonists might [British soldier firing a canon]
- 09:41
have kept dragging their buckled shoes until British forces
- 09:45
overwhelmed to them so just in terms of helping America win its freedom this
- 09:48
speech was kind of a big deal our nation's culture is all about freedom
- 09:52
freedom to speak our minds, freedom to work hard, and make a good living without
- 09:56
being taxed to death freedom to wear our baseball cap sideways. Without Henry's [Boy wearing baseball cap sideways on TV]
- 10:00
stirring speech we may not have any of our sacred freedoms today no capitalist
- 10:05
system, no American dream but doesn't it also teach us a little something about the
- 10:09
power of the written and spoken word well if a guy can get up in a room and [Sword appears out of the soil]
- 10:14
talk for 20 minutes and change so many minds what else is possible with the
- 10:18
power of language okay turning it over to you now careful for that itchy
- 10:22
trigger finger there what is Henry's tone ie his attitude toward the subject
- 10:27
matter in his speech what sort of things does he say and how does he say them in
- 10:31
order to achieve his purpose what types of appeals does Henry use in his
- 10:36
argument we're looking here for elements of ethos logos and pathos here....
- 10:40
ethos is he trying to appeal to his audience a
- 10:44
sense of ethics of the quality of their character or sense of right and wrong
- 10:49
logos if he trying to appeal to his audience a sense of logic by trying to [Logos explained]
- 10:54
rationalize their decision to go to war or pathos is he trying to appeal to his
- 10:58
audience's emotions to convince them to listen to their hearts or their guts and
- 11:03
finally how effective do you personally think Henry's words were if you were one
- 11:07
of the folks objecting to war would you have been swayed would he have won you [Man objecting to war]
- 11:11
over yep, but these bullets didn't want to use them yep just need to get one
- 11:16
more hole punched on my planned battle club card...or nope I didn't really hear
- 11:21
what he said had my beats on... right well shoot look at the time I must get
- 11:26
some shut-eye so I must get to bed I'm sorry gun humor [Man goes to sleep in bed with a rifle]
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