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Read the excerpts from Queen Elizabeth's speeches.
Address to the Troops at Tilbury
In the mean time my lieutenant-general
shall be in my stead, than whom never
prince commanded a more noble or
worthy subject, not doubting but by your
bedience to my general, by your
concord in the camp, and your valour in
the field, we shall shortly have a famous
victory over those enemies of God, of my
kingdoms, and of my people.
Response to Parliament's Request
That She Marry
For though I be never so careful of your
well-doing, and mind ever so to be, yet
may my issue grow out of kind, and
become perhaps ungracious.
How does the rhetorical appeal used in these excerpts from Queen Elizabeth's Address to the Troops at Tilbury, and
Response to Parliament's Request That She Marry compare?
Mark this and return
Both use an appeal to logos by providing a reason to support her purpose.
Both use an appeal to ethos by providing a reason why she should be trusted.
Dath ne ne Anment to lanan bu
SALUDDIn bas dienen ta nhmcatenati
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