ChatterBank1 min ago
Stand Up And Fight
As usual I am unable to C&P a link but I just listened to Penny Mordant's conference speech. I really think she should engage another speech writer. It was er ....bizarre to say the least. She appears to want to portray herself as Henry V or Sir Winston Churchill. She repeated 'Stand up and Fight' twelve times and the effect fell flat in my opinion. I found it toe curling. What did you think?
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by retrocop. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.used for effect
so is a "rhetorical device" - to persuade whilst giving the facts.
to be grouped with 'we will fight them on the beaches...." - altho with THAT, Churchill uses Aristotle's rule of threes ( seas and oceans, beaches, grounds) - not 12
[ "we will fight them on the beaches.... railway sidings east cheam, Downing st ( all numbers) not the one in Cambridge...." doesnt do it for me]
or the ' white heat of the techonological revolution' Harold WIlson 1963-4. - altho the only revolutionary he got was staring eyed Tony Benn hur hur hur
or "we want eight and we wont wait!" -- - - ( In popular sentiment, they were joined by King Edward VII, who supported eight more dreadnoughts. A Conservative MP coined what would become a popular slogan:)
note that I have given an aristotelian number of examples (3)
Blimey! I just watched that. It was a bit over the top, to say the least, but I take her point - with bells on. I do worry, however, about what she, personally, might have in mind when she encourages everyone to 'Stand up and fight!' I have a sneaking suspicion that she might be fighting for something that many of us wouldn't get out of bed for.