“I was never a bird on the unpinioned wing,” Winston Churchill said. “When I got up to speak, I always knew precisely where every noun and adjective would go and how every piece of punctuation would bed into my speech.” When Scott Morrison came out to give his concession speech on Saturday night, knowing precisely where every noun or adjective would go was the least of his concerns. He blustered his way through some engineered sincerity and rhetorical questions and got out of there. “How good was that?”
ADAM ZWAR: ALBO AND THE ART OF ORATORY
ADAM ZWAR: ALBO AND THE ART OF ORATORY
ADAM ZWAR: ALBO AND THE ART OF ORATORY
“I was never a bird on the unpinioned wing,” Winston Churchill said. “When I got up to speak, I always knew precisely where every noun and adjective would go and how every piece of punctuation would bed into my speech.” When Scott Morrison came out to give his concession speech on Saturday night, knowing precisely where every noun or adjective would go was the least of his concerns. He blustered his way through some engineered sincerity and rhetorical questions and got out of there. “How good was that?”