Dale Carnegie

THE ART OF PUBLIC SPEAKING


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       Dale Carnegie

      THE ART OF PUBLIC SPEAKING

      Acquiring Confidence Before An Audience & Methods in Achieving Efficiency and Speech Fluency

      Published by

      Books

      - Advanced Digital Solutions & High-Quality eBook Formatting -

       [email protected]

      2017 OK Publishing

      ISBN 978-80-7583-959-6

       THINGS TO THINK OF FIRST—A FOREWORD

       CHAPTER I—ACQUIRING CONFIDENCE BEFORE AN AUDIENCE

       CHAPTER II—THE SIN OF MONOTONY

       CHAPTER III—EFFICIENCY THROUGH EMPHASIS AND SUBORDINATION

       CHAPTER IV—EFFICIENCY THROUGH CHANGE OF PITCH

       CHAPTER V—EFFICIENCY THROUGH CHANGE OF PACE

       CHAPTER VI—PAUSE AND POWER

       CHAPTER VII—EFFICIENCY THROUGH INFLECTION

       CHAPTER VIII—CONCENTRATION IN DELIVERY

       CHAPTER IX—FORCE

       CHAPTER X—FEELING AND ENTHUSIASM

       CHAPTER XI—FLUENCY THROUGH PREPARATION

       CHAPTER XII—THE VOICE

       CHAPTER XIII—VOICE CHARM

       CHAPTER XIV—DISTINCTNESS AND PRECISION OF UTTERANCE

       CHAPTER XV—THE TRUTH ABOUT GESTURE

       CHAPTER XVI—METHODS OF DELIVERY

       CHAPTER XVII—THOUGHT AND RESERVE POWER

       CHAPTER XVIII—SUBJECT AND PREPARATION

       CHAPTER XIX—INFLUENCING BY EXPOSITION

       CHAPTER XX—INFLUENCING BY DESCRIPTION

       CHAPTER XXI—INFLUENCING BY NARRATION

       CHAPTER XXII—INFLUENCING BY SUGGESTION

       CHAPTER XXIII—INFLUENCING BY ARGUMENT

       CHAPTER XXIV—INFLUENCING BY PERSUASION

       CHAPTER XXV—INFLUENCING THE CROWD

       CHAPTER XXVI—RIDING THE WINGED HORSE

       CHAPTER XXVII—GROWING A VOCABULARY

       CHAPTER XXVIII—MEMORY TRAINING

       CHAPTER XXIX—RIGHT THINKING AND PERSONALITY

       CHAPTER XXX—AFTER-DINNER AND OTHER OCCASIONAL SPEAKING

       CHAPTER XXXI—MAKING CONVERSATION EFFECTIVE

       APPENDIX A—FIFTY QUESTIONS FOR DEBATE

       APPENDIX B—THIRTY THEMES FOR SPEECHES

       APPENDIX C—SUGGESTIVE SUBJECTS FOR SPEECHES

       APPENDIX D—SPEECHES FOR STUDY AND PRACTISE

      THINGS TO THINK OF FIRST

      A FOREWORD

       Table of Contents

      The efficiency of a book is like that of a man, in one important respect: its attitude toward its subject is the first source of its power. A book may be full of good ideas well expressed, but if its writer views his subject from the wrong angle even his excellent advice may prove to be ineffective.

      This book stands or falls by its authors' attitude toward its subject. If the best way to teach oneself or others to speak effectively in public is to fill the mind with rules, and to set up fixed standards for the interpretation of thought, the utterance of language, the making of gestures, and all the rest, then this book will be limited in value to such stray ideas throughout its pages as may prove helpful to the reader—as an effort to enforce a group of principles it must be reckoned a failure, because it is then untrue.

      It is of some importance, therefore, to those who take up this volume with open mind that they should see clearly at the out-start what is the thought that at once underlies and is builded through this structure. In plain words it is this:

      Training in public speaking is not a matter of externals—primarily; it is not a matter of imitation—fundamentally; it is not a matter of conformity to standards—at all. Public speaking is public utterance, public issuance, of the man himself; therefore the first thing both in time and in importance is that the man should be and think and feel things that are worthy of being given forth. Unless there be something of value within, no tricks of training can ever make of the talker anything more than a machine—albeit a highly perfected