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The Social PrincipleEarly Modern History | Speech | The Erosophic Society of the University of Alabama | 1843 William Gilmore Simms delivered his lecture The Social Principle: The True Source of National Permanence to the Erosophic Society[1] at the University of Alabama on 13 December 1842 during the occasion of his receiving an honorary LL.D. degree from that university.[2] An important text in Simms studies, this oration marks “Simms’s single most extensive published exposition of his social philosophy.”[3] He took as the genesis for his talk what he perceived as the fundamentally changed nature of the environs of western Alabama from his previous visit to the area, ... |
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The Sources of American IndependenceBritish Colonial History | Speech | The Town Council of Aiken, SC | 1844
The Sources of
American Independence. An Oration, on the Sixty-Ninth Anniversary of American
Independence was delivered by William Gilmore Simms on 4 July 1844 in
Aiken, SC. As its long title suggests,
the speech was composed to celebrate the sixty-nine years of American
nationhood since the Declaration of Independence; what is unmentioned in the
title but equally relevant to an understanding of this work is the fact that it
was composed essentially as a stump speech[1]
during Simms’s successful 1844 run for a seat in the South Carolina State
Legislature. Giving a speech ... |
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Inauguration of the Spartanburg Female CollegeAntebellum Period | Speech | Spartanburg Female College Board of Trustees | 1855
William Gilmore Simms spoke at the opening of the
Spartanburg Female College at approximately 1pm[1]
on August 22, 1855 to an audience comprised largely of the Board of Trustees
and other persons involved in the founding of that institution[2]. His remarks were published several weeks
later in a pamphlet entitled Inauguration
of the Spartanburg Female College. His
talk focused on the two related topics of the value of education in general and
the importance of female education specifically. On the former, Simms compared the mind of man
to a wilderness terrain awaiting ... |
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Poetry and the PracticalAntebellum Period | Speech | The University of Arkansas Press | 1996 Poetry and the Practical was published
in 1996 by The University of Arkansas Press as part of The Simms Series. Edited with an introduction and notes by
James Everett Kibler Jr., the book contains a lecture written by Simms between
the years of 1851-54, which expanded from one to three parts. Kibler summarizes the lecture as “a clear,
forceful, inspired defense of poetry against those who would relegate it to the
margins of life.”[1] In a 12 November 1850 letter to Evert Augustus
Duyckinck, Simms made first mention of the lecture: “I recieve [sic] another application for a public
Lecture ... |
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Self-DevelopmentAntebellum Period | Speech | The Thalian Society | 1847
William Gilmore Simms was invited to
give the oration, which would become Self-Development,
by the Literary Societies of Oglethorpe University in Milledgeville, GA in 1847. In consideration of his student audience,
Simms took as his theme the nature and progress of the individual, especially
in relation to his function within God’s plan.
The title quality, according to the author, is about recognizing one’s
God-given potentials and subsequently nurturing and expressing them in
action. Everybody has inborn strengths
and aptitudes; self-development is the art of fully ... |
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The Power of Cotton: A Paper Read in the City of New YorkAntebellum Period | Speech | 1856 The
Power of Cotton is
a pamphlet published by Chatterton & Brother of New York in 1856. The work claims to be a paper read in New
York in November 1856. The only known
copy of the paper had been in the possession of Theodore Parker, the most
prominent Unitarian and Transcendentalist minister in the northeast in
1856. The work was bequeathed to the
public library of the city of Boston from the Parker estate on 30 October 1864,
four years after Parker’s passing. On
both the cover and title page, the precise location of the reading and the
author’s name were both removed ... |