[65 years ago Tuesday, John F. Kennedy was inaugurated as President. One of the most famous parts of that January 1961 event was Robert Frost’s powerful poem, so this week I’ll AmericanStudy that text and other occasional poetry from American history. Leading up to a first for this blog, a piece of my own creative writing!]
On quick takeaways from the three 21st century
inaugural poems to date.
1)
Elizabeth Alexander, “Praise Song for the Day”
(2009): I’ve thought and talked and written a lot about critical
optimism and hard-won
hope over the last decade, and would say that Alexander’s poem for Barack Obama’s first
inauguration captures those perspectives and concepts very eloquently. I especially
like how the line that first introduces the poem’s title, “Praise strong for struggle,
praise song for the day,” expands in the poem’s final full verse and then
culminating single line: “In today’s sharp sparkle, this winter air,/any thing
can be made, any sentence begun./On the brink, on the brim, on the cusp,//praise
song for walking forward in that light.” Each one of the poems I’m highlighting
today looks different from the dimmed light of January 2026, but goddamn do we still
need to walk forward.
2)
Richard Blanco, “One Today” (2013): I don’t think I had
ever read Blanco’s poem, written for Obama’s second
inauguration, until researching this post, and I was immediately struck by
just how Whitmanesque it is, especially in those long lists (catalogs, as
Whitman scholars call them) of settings and social roles alike. The poem’s
final lines envision hard-won hope in ways that feel indebted to (or at least
in conversation with) Alexander’s, and that Amanda Gorman would herself echo and
extend eight years later in the poem I’ll get to in a moment. But the lines of
Blanco’s that I love best are the ones that are in conversation with MartÃn Espada’s
poem “Who
Burns for the Perfection of Paper?” (1993): “ring-up groceries as my mother
did/for twenty years, so I could write this poem”; and “hands/as worn as my
father’s cutting sugarcane/so my brother and I could have books and shoes.”
3)
Amanda Gorman, “The
Hill We Climb” (2021): It’s very difficult for me to read or watch Gorman’s
incredible poem, written for Joe Biden’s inauguration, these five years later, especially
when we get to/ lines like “We’ve seen a force that would shatter our nation, rather
than share it./Would destroy our country if it meant delaying democracy./And
this effort very nearly succeeded./But while democracy can be periodically delayed,
it can never be permanently defeated.” Jury’s still out on that one, I’m afraid.
But I still find these lines not only just as inspiring as ever, but a crystal
clear vision of how I would define both America and the work we must do: “If we’re
to live up to our own time, then victory won’t lie in the blade, but in all the
bridges we’ve made./That is the promise to glade, the hill we climb, if only we
dare./It’s because being American is more than a pride we inherit./It’s the
past we step into and how we repair it.” Couldn’t have said it better myself,
but I’ll try to say my own piece this weekend!
That special poem of mine this weekend,
Ben
PS. What do you think? Occasional poetry you’d share?