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Pathos is a literary device by which the speaker or writer chooses words or phrases to stir the audience’s emotion. Elizabeth employs pathos in several ways in her speech at Tilbury. Besides repeatedly stating her affection and love for her subjects, she chooses visceral words to move her listeners. “Foul,” “scorn,” and “treachery” all hint at the dangers she places herself in by appearing physically at the battle site. When referring to her subjects, she consistently refers to them as “her loving” people, who are “faithful,” “noble,” have “valour,” and are “worthy.” These are all evocative words that may stir a sense of something greater than themselves in the audience; they also establish Elizabeth’s concern for her people, underscoring that they are not simply faceless masses who might die for her. Finally, Elizabeth invokes God several times to help legitimize her campaign and remind subjects of her divine authority. In a relatively short speech, she mentions “God” three times: at the beginning, middle, and end of the address. Her closing words, “God, my kingdom, and my people!” (Paragraph 5), are the three main ideas she wants to leave with the audience.
One of the most famous parts of the speech is Elizabeth’s declaration, “I know I have the body of a weak and feeble woman; but I have the heart and stomach of a king” (Paragraph 4). In this way, Elizabeth contrasts her era’s expectations about women—that they are weak and feeble—with her inner spirit to help legitimize her ability and right to rule. This kind of side-by-side positioning of opposites is known as juxtaposition, and it typically serves to amplify the contrast between two things. Elizabeth immediately follows this gender-based juxtaposition with another implied contrast, this one between a “king of England” and “Parma or Spain, or any prince of Europe” (Paragraph 4). Here, the juxtaposition appeals to listeners’ patriotism, contrasting the dismissive phrase “any prince of Europe” with everything positive that “king of England” evokes.
Although Elizabeth’s speech is not long, she uses simple, vivid words that create concrete images for the listener. To refer to other leaders, she calls those who might be the victim of treason “tyrants.” She talks of the “strength” and “loyalty” of her subjects and how it may “safeguard” her. Women, she says, are not just “weak” but also “feeble.” She has not only the heart of a king but the “stomach” of one, too, implying that her interior is neither masculine nor feminine but something different altogether: royal. She describes her displeasure at Spain’s invasion as “foul scorn.” Finally, when she says she is among the troops to risk her life for England, she describes coming “in the midst and heat of the battle” to die with her people, “[her] honor and [her] blood, even in the dust” (Paragraph 3).
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