Read the excerpts from Queen Elizabeth's speeches.
Address to the Troops at Tilbury
Let tyrants fear, I have always so
behaved myself, that, under God, I have
placed my chiefest strength and
safeguard in the loyal hearts and good
will of my subjects, and therefore I am
come amongst you, as you see, at this
time, not for my recreation and disport,
but being resolved in the midst and heat
of the battle, to live or die among you all,
to lay down for my God, and for my
kingdoms, and for my people, my
honour, and my blood, even in the dust.
Response to Parliament's Request
That She Marry
For the other part, the manner of your
petition I do well like, and take it in good
part, because it is simple, and containeth
no limitation of place or person: If it had
been otherwise, I must needs have
misliked it very much, and thought it in
you a very great presumption, being
unfitting and altogether unmeet for you to
require them that may command.
Which best describes a difference in the types of rhetorical appeals used by Queen Elizabeth in these excerpts
from her Address to the Troops at Tilbury and Response to Parliament's Request That She Marry?
Mhon sneakies in her tranne Queen Elisabeth annsale in lanes to novinen the tranne of her.