Rhetorical Analysis Letter To John Winthrop

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I most kindly thank you for forging Plymouth into a city upon a hill which every other colony can aspire to gradually become by establishing a sense of order and control unlike your fellow counterpart Winthrop and the nefarious products of his crafting. You, sir, are Plymouth’s rose, burning with a red vibrant sinful passion that has been restricted and limited with a soft delicate outer layer of religious conformity and serendipity. But every rose has its thorns and when conversing with John Winthrop you lower you own identity and power to match or fall below his. No man should lower themselves in order to please something else in less it God himself. Even in a private secretive manner you must know that association is perception and, perception

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