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Rhetorical Devices In The Declaration Of Independence

Decent Essays

Inspiring America Americans all over the country pride themselves on the rights and freedoms that their ancestors have fought for. To the American people, freedom is expressed in multiple documents from our history, these including the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence. The first sentence of the third paragraph of the Declaration of Independence is compelling and inspiring to the American People because of the strong language it uses, the power it gives to the people to make them feel safe and secure, and it makes the people feel like the country truly belongs to them. The section of the Declaration of Independence of which I am referring to talks about the equality of men, their unalienable rights, the right of the people to change the government if it becomes destructive, and the safety and happiness of the American people. The goal of the Declaration of Independence was for the young nation to become independent from Great Britain, to unite and to become a powerful force without a monarch, but with the ideas and rule of the people. The Preamble to the Constitution talks about similar things, the goal of the Preamble was to explain what the Constitution was all about, about making a more perfect union, to have liberty and peace in the nation, and how those things were not possible without creating rules and laws for the people to obey. The first sentence of the third paragraph in the Declaration of Independence uses strong and powerful wording to inspire the people. The Declaration states, “...they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness...” this section gives the people the security they need, it gives them God-given rights with the knowledge that no one can take them away. The Declaration also uses very powerful wording, making the reader feel as though the document is undoubtedly true, and that their rights cannot be stripped from them; Whenever any form of government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new government, laying its new foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most

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