Lincoln's Second Inaugural Address Rhetorical Analysis Essay

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As we can only imagine, one can not erase the vivid images, of the Civil War from their memories, after seeing the fallen bodies and the fields of ash and smoke. The lasting images we view through photographs reminds us of the war that divided the nation, during tumultuous times. As the war came to an end, President Abraham Lincoln was elected for his second term in office. During, Lincoln's second inaugural speech he persuades his audience, to understand that the war was a catastrophe for all. The healing that is needed from this catastrophe will not begin, until the reformation of the once standing brotherhood, in order to, maintain peace and prosperity as a nation. To help persuade the audience, Lincoln's use of rhetorical strategies, evokes the audience to consolidate as one.
President Lincoln saw the need for reformation and peace as the main issue at hand and elaborated on it, targeting the viewers emotions by writing and reflecting on the two parties. As seen in the second paragraph, “Both parties depreciated war, but one of them would make war rather that let the nation survive.” Lincoln’s use of rhetorical strategies, such as ethos, appealed to his audiences ethics, by developing a sense of sorrow and …show more content…

Lincoln’s use of metaphors and personification in the ending paragraph is there to represent the coming together for the good of our country. “To bind up the nation's wounds, to care for him who shall have borne the battle and for his widow and orphan to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and last peace.” The use of this metaphor not only shows a repair but a loss of a brotherhood, Lincoln portrayed this struggle to help reset the peaceful brotherhood that was lost in the bloody battlefields during the Civil

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