Читать книгу When They Go Low, We Go High: Speeches that shape the world – and why we need them - Philip Collins, Philip Collins - Страница 7
Speeches
ОглавлениеMarcus Tullius Cicero: First Philippic against Mark Antony, The Senate, the Temple of Concord, Rome, 2 September 44 BC
Thomas Jefferson: Equal and Exact Justice to All Men, First Inaugural Address, Washington DC, 4 March 1801
Abraham Lincoln: Government of the People, by the People, for the People, The Gettysburg Address, 19 November 1863
John F. Kennedy: Ask Not What Your Country Can Do for You, Washington DC, 20 January 1961
Barack Obama: I Have Never Been More Hopeful about America, Grant Park, Chicago, 7 November 2012
Pericles: Funeral Oration, Athens, Winter, c. 431 BC
David Lloyd George: The Great Pinnacle of Sacrifice, Queen’s Hall, London, 19 September 1914
Woodrow Wilson: Making the World Safe for Democracy, Joint Session of the Two Houses of Congress, 2 April 1917
Winston Churchill: Their Finest Hour, House of Commons, 18 June 1940
Ronald Reagan: Tear Down This Wall, The Brandenburg Gate, Berlin, 12 June 1987
Elizabeth I of England: I Have the Heart and Stomach of a King, Tilbury, 9 August 1588
Benjamin Franklin: I Agree to This Constitution with All Its Faults, The Constitutional Convention, Philadelphia, 17 September 1787
Jawaharlal Nehru: A Tryst with Destiny, Constituent Assembly, Parliament House, New Delhi, 14 August 1947
Nelson Mandela: An Ideal for Which I Am Prepared to Die, Supreme Court of South Africa, Pretoria, 20 April 1964
Aung San Suu Kyi: Freedom from Fear, European Parliament, Strasbourg, 10 July 1991
William Wilberforce: Let Us Make Reparations to Africa, House of Commons, London, 12 May 1789
Emmeline Pankhurst: The Laws That Men Have Made, The Portman Rooms, 24 March 1908
Isidora Dolores Ibárruri Gómez (La Pasionaria): No Pasarán, Mestal Stadium, Valencia, 23 August 1936
Martin Luther King: I Have a Dream, The March on Washington, 28 August 1963
Neil Kinnock: Why Am I the First Kinnock in a Thousand Generations?, Welsh Labour Party conference, Llandudno, 15 May 1987
Maximilien Robespierre: The Political Philosophy of Terror, The National Convention, Paris, 5 February 1794
Adolf Hitler: My Patience Is Now at an End, Berlin Sportpalast, 26 September 1938
Fidel Castro: History Will Absolve Me, Santiago, Cuba, 16 October 1953
Václav Havel: A Contaminated Moral Environment, Prague, Czechoslovakia, 1 January 1990
Elie Wiesel: The Perils of Indifference, The White House, Washington DC, 12 April 1999
Edmund Burke: He is not Member of Bristol, but he is a Member of Parliament, Guildhall, Bristol, 3 November 1774