The rhetorical piece, The Golden Spe'ech, was delivered by Queen Elizabeth I of England to 141 Members of the Commons (including the Speaker), on October 30th, 1602. It was a speech that was expected to be addressing some pricing concerns, based on the recent economic issues facing the country. Surprisingly she revealed that it would be her final Parliament and turned the mode of the speech to addressing the love and respect she had for the count...
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The rhetorical piece, The Golden Spe'ech, was delivered by Queen Elizabeth I of England to 141 Members of the Commons (including the Speaker), on October 30th, 1602. It was a speech that was expected to be addressing some pricing concerns, based on the recent economic issues facing the country. Surprisingly she revealed that it would be her final Parliament and turned the mode of the speech to addressing the love and respect she had for the country, her position, and the Members themselves. It is the second such speech for which Queen Elizabeth I was noted, the first having been given shortly after the defeat of the Spanish Armada by English forces. The Golden Spe'ech marks the end of Elizabeth's reign, one which is widely considered one of the Golden Eras of England's history.
"The 'Golden' label was first coined in a commonwealth pamphlet which bore a header beginning 'This speech ought to be set in letters of gold'." "It was to be reprinted time and time again up to the eighteenth...
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