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Wu, Tingfang, 1842-1922

"America, through the spectacles of an Oriental diplomat"

Speeches delivered on such occasions are generally reported
in all the newspapers, and, of course, discussed by all sorts of people,
the wise and the otherwise, so that the speaker has to be
very careful as to what he says. Our President confines himself
to the more formal procedure of issuing an official mandate, the same in kind,
though differing in expression, as an American President's Inaugural Address,
or one of his Messages to Congress.
Commercial men do not understand and are impatient with the restrictions
which hedge round a Foreign Minister, and in their anxiety to get speakers
they will look anywhere. On one occasion I received an invitation
to go to Canada to attend a banquet at a Commercial Club
in one of the principal Canadian cities. It would have given me
great pleasure to be able to comply with this request,
as I had not then visited that country, but, contrary to inclination,
I had to decline. I was accredited as Minister to Washington,
and did not feel at liberty to visit another country
without the special permission of my Home Government.
Public speaking, like any other art, has to be cultivated.
However scholarly a man may be, and however clever he may be
in private conversation, when called upon to speak in public
he may sometimes make a very poor impression. I have known
highly placed foreign officials, with deserved reputations
for wisdom and ability, who were shockingly poor speakers at banquets.
They would hesitate and almost stammer, and would prove quite incapable
of expressing their thoughts in any sensible or intelligent manner.


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