Unspoken
By Alton Gansky
()
About this ebook
Three time presidential candidate, reformer, publisher, former secretary of state, William Jennings Bryan looked forward to delivering the prosecution's summary in the trial of John T. Scopes. It was one of the reasons, perhaps the major reason, he served on the prosecution in the "Trial of the Century." The speech was never given in court. Clarence Darrow and the defense team out maneurvered Bryan. The "Commoner" would die five days later, but not before placing the speech with a publisher who printed and distributed the work shortly after Bryan died. The speech and the book were Bryan's last words to the world about education and evolution. Now, almost a century later, author Alton Gansky takes a close look at Bryan's last speech and reflects on the man, the trial, and the unspoken speech.
Alton Gansky
Alton Gansky: Alton Gansky is the author of twenty published novels and six nonfiction works. A Christy Award finalist (for A Ship Possessed) and an Angel Award winner (for Terminal Justice), he is a frequent speaker at writer's conferences and other speaking engagements. Alton brings an eclectic background to his writing: he has been a firefighter, and he spent ten years in architecture and twenty-two years in pulpit ministry. He now writes full-time from his home in southern California where he lives with his wife.
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Unspoken - Alton Gansky
UNSPOKEN
The Last Speech of William Jennings Bryan
Alton Gansky
Unspoken:
The Last Speech of
Williams Jennings Bryan
Copyright © 2016 by Alton Gansky
Published by Alloyd Books
(Gansky Communications)
ISBN: 9781311070463
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All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced without written permission, except for brief quotations in books and critical reviews.
Scripture quotations by the author are taken from the New American Standard Bible®, Copyright © 1960, 1962, 1963, 1968, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1995 by The Lockman Foundation Used by permission." (www.Lockman.org)
Scripture quoted by William Jennings Bryan in his speech are drawn from the King James Version
Table of Contents
Author’s Forward
About this Book
1925: Scopes Monkey Trial
Text of Speech with Annotation
A Brief Reply by Clarence Darrow
About the Author
Endnotes
Author’s Forward
THE TENNESSEE SUMMER of 1925 was stifling. Still, hundreds of people of Dayton, Tennessee and nearby regions came dressed in suits and dresses to stand along the tracks where a Southern Railways train waited. Men, several in Navy uniforms, carried a bronze coffin to the back of the last car and helped load a passenger well-known to the entire country. It was July 29, and the man in the coffin had died in his sleep three days before. The man was sixty-five-year-old William Jennings Bryan, one of the best known men of his day and one of the most controversial figures in U.S. history.
The train moved south from the now famous berg to Chattanooga approximately forty-five miles away, then turned north to make the 600-mile journey to the nation’s capital. Along the way the train made stops and crowds gathered to pay their respects. Hymns were sung, men and women wept, and some peered through the back door of the railcar to catch a glimpse of the Great Commoner—a door Mary Baird Bryan, the deceased’s wife, had requested be left open so people could peek inside. Had the news not already been widely spread, an onlooker seeing the emotional crowds might be forgiven for thinking the president of the United States had died.
William Jennings Bryan was a polarizing force in politics during the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. Although often described as a self-aggrandizing, publicity-seeking, ignorant, religious bigot, he was nothing like that portrayal. He was a man passionate about fairness, faith, and the common man. He spent over thirty years in politics winning many to his thinking and aggravating some to the point of hatred. No one was ambivalent about WJB.
His résumé is almost too much to believe: lawyer, international traveler, orator, congressman. At thirty-six, he was the youngest man to run for president. He went on to become a publisher, platform speaker, Bible teacher, Presbyterian leader, contributor to three constitutional amendments, secretary of state under Woodrow Wilson, and author. He was the first presidential candidate to take his message directly to the people. In his day, candidates let others campaign for them. It was considered undignified to do otherwise. WJB chose to ignore the custom and make his case directly to the voters, traveling thousands of miles by train and car. Wherever he went, hundreds showed up to hear the man from Nebraska speak.
Today most only remember two things about William Jennings Bryan: his Cross of Gold
speech, and what has become known as the Scopes Monkey Trial.
The Cross of Gold speech launched Bryan into the public spotlight and so moved his fellow Democrats that they made him their candidate for president in the 1896 election. It is a speech that can be found in most books listing the country’s greatest orations.
It was his ability to sway people with the spoken word that brought Bryan to Dayton. Already known for his anti-evolution beliefs, he had spoken against Darwinism many times. The Menace of Darwinism was published by the Fleming H. Revell Company in 1922. The short book was an extract from Bryan’s larger work, In His Image by the same publisher, also 1922. In a sense, Bryan had written the book
on anti-evolution.
Yet, Bryan proved less useful than might have been hoped. While he was a master of stagecraft, he was weak in court proceedings. Fortunately for the state of Tennessee, General
Tom Stewart, the district’s attorney general. (Titles were important to the court with Stewart often called General,
Bryan Colonel,
and, just to keep things balanced, an honorary title of Colonel
was given to Clarence Darrow.) Bryan had not practiced law in over three decades. He was there in a support role, to deliver the summation for the prosecution and to lend his notoriety to the case.
When Darrow opted out of delivering a summation for Scopes defense and encouraged the court to go ahead and find his client guilty so that they may try the case in a higher court, Bryan lost his moment to shine. And after his disastrous time on the witness stand as an expert witness on the Bible where he took a pounding from Darrow, he needed a second chance to say what he had been prevented from saying earlier.
Robbed of that, he arranged to have editor George Fort Milton of the Chattanooga News publish the speech. The address was put in book form by Bryan’s publisher that same year.
That speech is important for several reasons. First, it reveals Bryan’s motivations for resisting evolution. He harbored concerns that the youth of his day could be and were being corrupted by Darwinism. He feared for their spiritual welfare and that of the country.
Second, it dispels, in Bryan’s own words, the idea that he hated science, which he did not.
Third, he wanted to show that those who reject Darwin’s ideas are neither fools, nor uneducated. He goes to length to show what he perceives are gaps of logic in Darwinism.
Fourth, he feared what was being called social Darwinism,
the idea that the strong should prevail over the weak, and that eugenics is not only logical but good for the human race.
Fifth, that Darwinism steals the soul of every person who adopts its tenets. It was a danger to churches, the Bible, the home, and hope.
Lastly, that evolution will lead to more and worse wars; wars greater than what the country had seen in World War I which took millions of lives.
Agree with Bryan or not, his great concern remained where his interests had always been: the common man.
About this Book
THE DEBATES BETWEEN proponents of evolution and those who preach special creation have always been hot and divisive. Charles Darwin published the first of his two major works in November of 1859. On the Origin of Species caused a maelstrom that continues to blow today. The release of The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex (1871) only heightened the tension. The topic drew lines and forced people to choose sides. Even churches were divided over the subject