Demosthenes Trains His Voice with Pebbles
Athens’ greatest orator started with a stutter — and a mouthful of stones.

Jacques Louis David — "The Death of Socrates" (1787), public domain
A Voice Drowned Out.
When Demosthenes first addressed the Athenian assembly, the crowd jeered. He stammered, gasped, and his words vanished in the din. For a politician in Athens, this was social exile — eloquence was power.
An Orator Born by Willpower.
Refusing to quit, Demosthenes trained in secret: he recited verses with pebbles in his mouth, shouted above thunder on stormy beaches, and practiced full speeches while running uphill. Ancient biographers like Plutarch describe him building his own underground studio to perfect every gesture and word.
From Mockery to Mastery.
Within a decade, Demosthenes became the most feared voice in Athens, leading the city’s resistance against Macedon. His transformation made him a symbol for the self-made man — revered long after Macedon silenced his city.
Demosthenes, mocked for his weak voice and awkward delivery, transformed himself into a legend using self-invented speech therapy — proving grit can trump birthright in Athens’ cutthroat assembly.