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- Path: sparky!uunet!paladin.american.edu!auvm!SUVM.BITNET!RGCANTOR
- Message-ID: <HISTORY%93012123205046@UBVM.CC.BUFFALO.EDU>
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.history
- Date: Thu, 21 Jan 1993 23:02:07 LCL
- Sender: History <HISTORY@PSUVM.BITNET>
- From: Ron Cantor <RGCANTOR@SUVM.BITNET>
- Subject: Angelou/Santayana
- Lines: 21
-
- How many of you caught Maya Angelou's twist on Santayana's oft-quoted
- (and misquoted) statement that "Those who do not remember the past are
- condemned to relive it"? In Wednesday's inaugural poem, Angelou stated:
-
- "History, despite its wrenching pain
- Cannot be unlived, but if faced
- With courage, need not be lived again."
-
- While we're on the subject, it's disturbing how many historical inaccuracies
- were perpetuated by televised coverage of the inaugural week's events. Several
- commentators remarked that Angelou's inaugural poem was the first "since Robert
- Frost read his poem at the Kennedy innaugural." Of course, this is technically
- innacurate. One of the great inaugural stories of all time is about how an
- aged Robert Frost, standing at the podium on that cold day in January, 1961
- excused himself for not being able to focus on his copy of the poem he had
- written especially for Kennedy's inaugural. Instead, he recited another poem
- by heart.
-
- And the inaccuracies did not stop here. A CNN reporter told of how Clinton
- travelled to Washington from Monticello, following Benjamin Franklin's (sic)
- route! There were others as well, but I've already forgotten them.
-