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Sometimes a Great Speech (A close reading of the second Bush inaugural)
The Weekly Standard ^ | January 31, 2005 | David Gelernter

Posted on 01/22/2005 3:46:03 PM PST by RWR8189

GEORGE W. BUSH IS a strong, clear-minded president--one of the strongest and clearest-minded we have ever had. Why can't a great president give a great speech?

The president's second inaugural address was fine and generous, a big speech with sweeping views in all directions, a speech Americans can be proud of. But the language did not always rise to the level of the ideas. There were many good phrases, a few superb ones, and a brilliant ending. There were also weak phrases, a few unclear ones, and one absolute stinker. On the whole it was very good. It should have been better.

Granted: Poking holes is easy and fun. Turning blank pages into finished speeches for nagging critics to poke holes in is not so easy and no fun. Besides, any sane person will choose beautiful ideas over beautiful writing any day. But why can't this president have both? He deserves both.

But, before we begin, it's important to understand that loads of people work on big presidential speeches, some of them perfectly willing to override good prose in the interest of fine-tuning the political implications of every last syllable. The real writers, left alone, would unquestionably have produced better writing. In these comments I criticize the words, not the wordsmiths.

And one last caveat, in a way even more important. Inaugural addresses deserve to be pored over because they are monumentally important and will be reread for as long as the nation exists; possibly longer. But no other writers in the world have their prose so mercilessly dissected. Inaugural-address writing is not for the faint-hearted. A few years of fighter-pilot experience probably helps. (Ask the president.)

Let's begin with some good moves. The president and his writers have a gift for laying down a barrage of short, strong phrases that hit home with great force. The president was "determined to fulfill the oath that I have sworn and you have witnessed." Each short, energetic phrase makes the speech surge forward. I am determined to fulfill, I have sworn, you have witnessed; terrific. Or: "You have seen that life is fragile, and evil is real, and courage triumphs." New power kicks in at regular intervals. It's a three-stage rocket of a sentence.

But there are too many wrong or weak or confusing words, and phrases that are not quite right, and sentences that are not absolutely clear. Each time you hear one you wonder "What?" for a split second; then you forget all about it as the speech moves forward. But those split-second pauses produce a scratchy, unpolished texture that listeners experience as a vague not-quite-rightness.

"We have seen our vulnerability--and we have seen its deepest source." The first "seen" refers to real seeing--we turned on our TVs and saw towers on fire. (A rhythm Blake would have liked.) The second "seen" is confusing. Was there a TV picture of a "deep source"? What does one look like? The president should have said, "We have seen our vulnerability--and understood its deepest source."

He was seduced by parallelism, which is usually a good thing. But not always. The president said, "No one is fit to be a master and no one deserves to be a slave." Nice parallelism: no one is fit paired with no one deserves. Notice how much weaker the first phrase sounds than "No man is fit to be a master"; it was cut out by feminist censors (now internalized and conveniently posted in our brains). But the real problem is the second phrase: No one "deserves to be a slave." If Saddam deserves to be executed, surely he deserves to be enslaved, which is a less-awful punishment. Slavery is unacceptable not because no criminal is vicious enough to deserve it, but because it demeans our own sense of God's justice. "As I would not be a slave," said Lincoln, "so I would not be a master." Hint: If you can quote Lincoln, do.

Other words are not quite right and parallelism has nothing to do with it. Violence "will cross the most defended borders," said the president; he should have said "the best defended borders." Only one force can "expose the pretensions of tyrants, and reward the hopes of the decent and tolerant, and that is the force of human freedom." But the drive for freedom doesn't expose bad things, it defeats them. And why not "the barbarity of tyrants" instead of merely their "pretensions"? And why bestow a weak-tea phrase like "the decent and tolerant" (as if they were Miss Congeniality runners-up) on desperate peoples longing for liberty?

More wrong words; more milliseconds lost to confusion. "Every man and woman on this earth has rights and dignity and matchless value, because they bear the image of the Maker of heaven and earth." "Matchless value" sounds like a late-night cable TV pitch (Plus we'll throw in a LintMasterII!). The president meant "immeasurable value," "infinite worth," something like that. "They bear the image of the Maker of heaven and earth," said the president. An echo of the Nicene Creed, okay, but "They were created in the image of God" would have been even better. Hint: If you can quote the King James Bible, do.

The president said, "My most solemn duty is to protect this nation." But "my most solemn duty" only sounds as if it means something; on closer inspection it doesn't. He might have meant "My most important duty," or "my hardest duty," or something else. We can't tell.

Sometimes we find words or phrases that are just too weak for this president. No "human being aspires to live at the mercy of bullies." Granted, but how can a president who has beaten the Taliban and Saddam speak of "bullies," as if they were vicious schoolboys? What ever happened to "bloody thuggish murderers," for example? Let a strong, clear-minded president use strong, clear words. "When freedom came under attack," said the president, "our response came like a single hand over a single heart." Why is it a "response" to a terrorist atrocity to put your hand on your heart? Affirming one's patriotism is always right, but our response went much farther than that. "When freedom came under attack, we struggled as one to rescue the victims and care for the wounded; we wept as one, mourned as one, then struck as one--not to wreak vengeance but to spread blessing." My sentence is neither brilliant nor memorable but is closer (I think) to what the president actually meant.

Sometimes the tone is wrong. "To serve your people you must learn to trust them." Sounds like a guidance counselor addressing the ninth grade.

"Because we have acted in the great liberating tradition of this nation" is a classic piece of unclear writing. Does a tradition become a "great liberating tradition" because it makes us feel free?--like sky-diving or running a marathon? Sure, I know what he means. In an inaugural address, that's not good enough. Likewise "we will make our society more prosperous and just and equal." Equal to what? To cut that kind of corner doesn't work on America's greatest occasion.

Another example; another split-second's wondering instead of listening: "One day this untamed fire of freedom will reach the darkest corners of our world." The "fire of freedom" is good, but world suggests globe, and globes have no corners. I don't imagine that many listeners smacked their foreheads in befuddlement. (What? Globes don't have corners!) What actually happens is more like a fast-moving shadow that disappears almost before you notice it. A trivial point; a crumpled gum-wrapper. But enough crumpled gum-wrappers can ruin a beautiful lawn. If the president had said, "this untamed fire of freedom will reach the darkest caves on earth," he would also have hinted at bin Laden's ultimate destruction.

There was one flat-out unacceptable moment. Evidently the "edifice of character" is "sustained in our national life by the truths of Sinai, the Sermon on the Mount," and . . . "the words of the Koran"? Come off it! Which words? Name one! Is there a single sentence, phrase, idea in the Koran that has made any difference to this nation whatsoever? I'm not knocking the Koran; pluralism is wonderful. The problem is that at this moment, no listener in the whole world could possibly have believed that the president was serious.

To close with the Liberty Bell was brilliant--exactly right. The goal of the address was to ring-out crisp and clear and bright and bell-like; to proclaim liberty throughout the land, unto all the inhabitants thereof. And the president finished with one of the best phrases in the whole speech: "We are ready for the greatest achievements in the history of freedom."

Let me conclude from a different angle. Good, clear writing is a dead-serious issue. A society that is unable to express itself clearly is endangering its very existence. But don't forget that Republicans have a lot on their minds nowadays--intellectual spring cleaning, a ton of old liberal myths to be dumped in the garbage, a fast-changing world to understand under new assumptions in new ways. Reactionaries have more time than radicals to polish their prose. Democrats have had plenty of time to work the bugs out of their speeches; they've been saying the same damned things, more or less, for 30 years. But I'd choose a George W. Bush pronouncement over an exquisitely polished reactionary-liberal utterance any day. I'm proud of the president's speech and what it says about him, about Progressive Conservatism, and about America.

Not such a bad performance after all.

 

David Gelernter is a contributing editor to The Weekly Standard.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2ndterm; bush43; inaugural; inauguraladdress; term2; w2; weeklystandard

1 posted on 01/22/2005 3:46:03 PM PST by RWR8189
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To: RWR8189

Gelernter is a great writer!


2 posted on 01/22/2005 3:49:04 PM PST by Tax-chick (Wielder of the Dread Words of Power, "Bless your heart, honey!")
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To: RWR8189

Thanks for posting, Gelernter is always a good read!


3 posted on 01/22/2005 3:49:07 PM PST by Maigret
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To: RWR8189
William F. Buckley ripped the speech writer a new one, too:

What is Bush saying?

4 posted on 01/22/2005 3:51:07 PM PST by snarks_when_bored
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To: RWR8189; writer33

very interesting, and this guy knows our President. someone ping Karen Hughes.


5 posted on 01/22/2005 3:57:32 PM PST by bitt
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To: RWR8189
I've always admired Gelernter.

I'm embarrassed for him here.

6 posted on 01/22/2005 4:02:35 PM PST by iconoclast (Conservative, not partisan.)
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To: RWR8189
>>There was one flat-out unacceptable moment. Evidently the "edifice of character" is "sustained in our national life by the truths of Sinai, the Sermon on the Mount," and . . . "the words of the Koran"? Come off it! Which words? Name one! Is there a single sentence, phrase, idea in the Koran that has made any difference to this nation whatsoever? I'm not knocking the Koran; pluralism is wonderful. The problem is that at this moment, no listener in the whole world could possibly have believed that the president was serious.<<

That was the worst moment of the speech. I was so pleased when he started with Sinai and the Sermono n the Mount, then he got to that business about the Koran and I just cringed.

7 posted on 01/22/2005 4:16:14 PM PST by Dan Middleton (Car 185 is out of service. RIP Officer Brian Hurst, CPD (USMC, Ret.))
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To: Miss Marple

Gelernter!


8 posted on 01/22/2005 4:18:25 PM PST by Molly Pitcher (We are Americans...the sons and daughters of liberty...*.from FReeper the Real fifi*)
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To: RWR8189

Who cares? As for grading it, I liked the theme. You can quibble with the wording like David Gelertner did here but that's beside the point. Its the ideas, not the words people will be remembering thirty years from now.


9 posted on 01/22/2005 5:00:00 PM PST by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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To: Molly Pitcher

His first name should be Der.


10 posted on 01/22/2005 5:09:24 PM PST by csmusaret (Urban Sprawl is an oxymoron)
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To: RWR8189
Beautiful, Mr. Gelernter. Why aren't you up there with the speechwriters crafting these?

I agree with every point he made except the hand over the heart reference. I took it to mean that we all responded as one, with a "hand on the heart" in the shock and grief of a surviving loved one just hearing the news. Not an expression of patriotism. So that one worked for me.

I never thought about it before but those shadows, those crumpled gum wrappers, DO slow it down for me. I agree with Mr. Gelernter: I'd like our great speeches to be perfect too.

Though I did love the content.

11 posted on 01/22/2005 5:22:23 PM PST by Yaelle
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To: Tax-chick

BTTT


12 posted on 01/22/2005 5:55:29 PM PST by Tax-chick (Wielder of the Dread Words of Power, "Bless your heart, honey!")
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To: iconoclast
Can't imagine David being so picayune.

Guess he had to write something, but sheesh.

13 posted on 01/22/2005 6:02:36 PM PST by OldFriend (America's glory is not dominion, but liberty.)
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To: RWR8189

Oh, that Dvid Gelernter had written that speech!

Absolutely spine tingling! The world would be marveling!


14 posted on 01/22/2005 6:03:45 PM PST by Paperdoll
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To: RWR8189
Pres. Bush's speech will go down in history amongst the greatest. I got it, and so does most of America. It was awesome.
My final test and confirmation of what I was thinking was my husband. I taped it and replayed it for my husband, who was unable to be at home to watch. He is a very educated in history. He has read tons. He is a realist and pragmatic person. When the speech was over he stated, it was awesome and would be remembered in history, just as Pres. Lincoln's Gettysburg address.
People and the news ridiculed that speech at the time too.
He said President Bush has seized the pivotal moment of this point in time. He will be remembered for this and given credit for such.
15 posted on 01/22/2005 6:19:45 PM PST by rose
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To: rose

Your son sounds like a very astute person; he must have some pretty special parents as well!


16 posted on 01/22/2005 6:40:36 PM PST by alwaysconservative (My fingers don't alwasy wrok teh wya thyere spposed too)
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To: RWR8189
Man! Do I wish that I had the benefit of this article Thursday afternoon when I was the subject of a Freeper lynching, here:

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1324749/posts

And being a fool for punishment, I had to repeat it Friday.
*sigh*

17 posted on 01/22/2005 7:40:37 PM PST by Publius6961 (The most abundant things in the universe are hydrogen, ignorance and stupidity.)
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To: Publius6961

BUMP!


18 posted on 01/22/2005 7:52:06 PM PST by Publius6961 (The most abundant things in the universe are hydrogen, ignorance and stupidity.)
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To: OldFriend
Well, he is criticizing the phraseology. I can accept this type of criticism, although I think he is being a bit picayunish.

This is different from Noonan's slam.

19 posted on 01/22/2005 8:41:16 PM PST by Miss Marple
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To: rose
When the speech was over he stated, it was awesome and would be remembered in history, just as Pres. Lincoln's Gettysburg address. People and the news ridiculed that speech at the time too.

I have read this also; apparently the fashion of the day in speeches was quite different than President Lincoln's small address. From what I remember of the account of this in Bill Bryson's "Made In America", the speaker just previous to Mr. Lincoln had apparently speechified for quite some time, and the press had expected the President to do the same. Instead he gave his short address -- and it was given short shrift by the press, who were more impressed by the previous speaker. (Douglas?)

I didn't like this writer's analysis, nor did I care for Ms. Noonan's. The President gave a fine speech, and these carping "I didn't like this word, it should have been that one" pieces don't deserve time in a composition class, much less the public arena.

20 posted on 01/23/2005 4:49:55 AM PST by snowsislander
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