In 2024, more than 77 million Americans elected an old man to be their president again, so it should not shock anyone to hear that the 78-year-old Trump will take his oath — Trump and oath, quite the joke! — indoors because of the weather forecast. As we get older, the cold seems colder. So into the Capitol — the building his supporters violently stormed four years ago — Trump will go.
In 1961, a much younger president, John F. Kennedy, took his oath outdoors in the same temperature (22 degrees F) forecast for Trump’s inauguration.
Kennedy was 43 at the time he took office, bringing vigor to what he called the New Frontier, a time when a torch would be passed to activist citizens to move the country forward. The speech and the moment was bright and optimistic. “And so, my fellow Americans,” Kennedy said, puffs of exhaust coming from his mouth in the cold, “ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country.”

It’s my first memory of a big event on television.
During the ceremonies, Robert Frost recited a poem, “The Gift Outright,” that he had written a couple of decades earlier. I read the poem years ago and did not find it particularly inspiring for a poet with such an excellent body of work. I read it again recently and, while appreciating the poem’s patriotic spirit, I found Frost’s description of the nation’s history myopic, based in the mythical American thinking that was common among white men of his generation (and is still common among the MAGA).
It’s not Frost at his best, by any means.
The poem is frothy with Manifest Destiny — that is, the fervent belief that this land was made for European whites to conquer, from East to West, using slaves and removing Native Americans in the process. Frost seems to think that nothing of any value occurred in North America — unstoried, artless, unenhanced — before “we” arrived, never acknowledging the people who lived here long before the colonists started cutting through the forests.
A lot of us would find such a poem insultingly narrow today, and that’s a good thing. The MAGA right likes to denigrate “woke” thinking as political correctness gone mad when all it represents is enlightenment, mature thinking about ourselves and others, and honesty — honesty about our past and our present. The MAGA right finds “wokeness” offensive because it challenges the same racial/ethnic superiority, framed as patriotism, that Frost betrayed in that poem at Kennedy’s inauguration.
The Gift Outright
The land was ours before we were the land’s
She was our land more than a hundred years
Before we were her people. She was ours
In Massachusetts, in Virginia,
But we were England’s, still colonials,
Possessing what we still were unpossessed by,
Possessed by what we now no more possessed.
Something we were withholding made us weak
Until we found out that it was ourselves
We were withholding from our land of living,
And forthwith found salvation in surrender.
Such as we were we gave ourselves outright
(The deed of gift was many deeds of war)
To the land vaguely realizing westward,
But still unstoried, artless, unenhanced,
Such as she was, such as she will become.
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Thank You . We need Intelligent thoughts now more than ever 🙏❤️🙏
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Wonderful ♥️
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Thank you for this honest assessment of this disappointing Frost poem. As you say, it certainly does not align with more informed thought today. We will miss your columns in the paper.
What’s next? Maybe a book ?
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Dan,
Here I am again. I hope your separation from the Sun was consensual and OK with you. Many of us are grieving, as your columns were a good reason not to cancel our subscriptions. I have also been hesitant to cancel because my dad was the Sunâs White House correspondent (before Baker), and I have many sweet, childhood memories of spending time in the Sunâs DC office in the old Press Club until Dad moved on to work in the Truman White House.
I sent your piece to Austin Sarat at Amherst who said âyesâ and ânoâ to your points about Frostâs poem. He wrote, âFor me, his lines are aspirational as much as a recounting of the past.â I studied Frost and could never make up my mind as to whether he was pulling our legs. There is a fair amount of scholarship that thinks there was truth in that. He was a humble, gentle man in so many ways, very different from Henry Steele Commager who taught at Amherst at the same time as Frost did.
Trumpâs utterances or silence these past few days to the garbage coming out of âPresidentâ Muskâs mouth has made me seriously bilious.
Alex Short
Sent from Outlook http://aka.ms/weboutlook
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Dear Dan,
I hope you don’t mind that I address you by your first name but after reading your column in the Sunpapers for so many years, I think of you as “Dan”, not “Mr. Rodricks”.
My comment is not related to today’s email. I just wanted to say I’m so glad to have found your website! I admire your perseverance for continuing your column after the takeover but certainly understand why you finally separated. I finally cancelled my subscription because I could not stomach the bloviating by Mr. Armstrong who sadly has twisted the Sunpapers into Fox online. Thank you for continuing to write the truth! In appreciation,
Mary Lacey
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Robert Frost read from memory due to Sun glare preventing from reading the poem he wrote for the event.
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