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HURRY PLEASE!!!!!

How does Darrow use rhetoric in this excerpt to attempt to influence the sentence Leopold and Loeb will receive? For God's sake, are we crazy? In the face of history, of every line of philosophy, against the teaching of every religionist and seer and prophet the world has ever given us, we are still doing what our barbarous ancestors did when they came out of the caves and the woods!… Your honor, I am almost ashamed to talk about it. I can hardly imagine we are in the nineteenth or the twentieth century. And yet there are men who seriously say that for what nature has done, for what life has done, for what training has done, take the boys' lives.
1. He uses rhetorical questions to encourage the judge and audience to imagine the childhood traumas Loeb and Leopold experienced.
2.He uses direct address, speaking to the judge and the listening audience, to point out how easily they might find themselves in the same situation as Leopold and Loeb.
3.Darrow uses charged language, such as “crazy” and “barbarous” and “ashamed” to persuade the judge and audience to reject the death penalty in spite of the horrible crime Leopold and Loeb committed.
4.Darrow uses repetition (“for what nature has done, for what life has done) to emphasize that there are many justifications for why Loeb and Leopold behaved as they did.

User Dan Bray
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Personally, I believe number 3 would be the correct answer. But narrowing it down I was stuck between 3 and 4 so please double check me. Hope this helps :)
User Heraldo
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Answer: 3. Darrow uses charged language, such as “crazy” and “barbarous” and “ashamed” to persuade the judge and audience to reject the death penalty in spite of the horrible crime Leopold and Loeb committed.

This is the option that best identifies the rhetoric that Darrow uses in an attempt to influence the sentence that Leopold and Loeb will receive. Darrow uses charged language and words that have strong connotations. By using these words, he hopes his speech will be persuasive. He wants the audience to emotionally respond to his words. He hopes this might convince the judge and the audience to reject the death penalty.

User Jake Alsemgeest
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