NEW HAVEN, Conn., Jan. 13, 2009
Inaugural Poet Part Of History - Again
CBS Evening News: Contemporary Poet Elizabeth Alexander Saw MLK, Now She Will Honor Obama
-
Poet and Yale professor Elizabeth Alexander, 46, is slated to read a poem at Barack Obama's inauguration Jan. 20. (CBS)
-
Special Report Inauguration '09 CBS News coverage of the inaugural of the 44th President of the United States
-
Photo Essay Inauguration Preps Nation's capital is readied for the swearing in of Barack Obama.
- Yo Yo Ma Thrilled To Play At Inauguration
- An Unlikely Drum Corps
- Inaugural Poet Is Part Of History Again
- Tuskegee Airmen To Join Obama's Inauguration
She was barely one year old when her parents brought her to the Lincoln Memorial to hear Dr. King's speech. Her father was a civil rights advisor to President Johnson.
She was a part of history then. She will be a part of history now.
"Throughout the years, that became an important, iconic story in our family," Alexander said. "A way of saying, 'this is what you do when you think that things should be better. You work, you march, you do and contribute what you have to contribute.' That's what always meant to me so the day after Dr. King's birthday, to be in that very spot and for me also to be in the great city that I grew up in is going to be very powerful."
She becomes only the fourth person in history to read a poem during a presidential inauguration.
The last poet to have this honor was Miller Williams, who read for President Bill Clinton's second Inauguration 1997.
Maya Angelou was his first in 1993.
Robert Frost was the very first during President John F. Kennedy's inauguration in 1961.
Frost actually recited an old poem he'd memorized. Blinded by the sun, he couldn't read the poem from the podium he'd actually written for the day.
Speaking of Frost, what's Alexander's back up plan in case something goes wrong on stage on Tuesday?
"I will have many copies tucked away," she said.
With five books on poetry, a Pulitzer Prize nomination in 2005, Alexander says the inaugural poem is all but finished.
"What will be your job that day?" Pitts asked. "What are you hoping to accomplish?"
"I am hoping to offer language that will give people a moment of pause," Alexander said. "That there is almost a quiet pool in which they are able to stand and think for a moment. I think that's part of what poetry does. It arrests us."
Alexander says she's not nervous. She's humbled.
And next Tuesday, she hopes to create a visual imagery with words that will capture the moment in time.
© MMIX, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
- Obama has a wonderful opportunity to reclassify and re-situate rap in his embrace of poetry at his inauguration. A world of science without poetry is like a world of land without trees.
What may be found is that poetry for humanitarian purposes is very much more than "just words." - Reply to this comment
I remember, at age 10 or so, saying, "I hate they put these scenes on T.V. What if my parents see this? It will kill them." Of course, it still hasn''t killed them. I wish the dying eldest generation was not sleeping alone tonight. I wish the law was not busy teaching manners to high-paid executives.- Reply to this comment
- Thank you for the interview with Poet Elizabeth Alexander, but CBS made a very poor decision on their ad to place before it on-line. I want to show this to students, but it will be difficult with the sexual commentary of the Mohr ad. Please consider this the next time you place ads.
- Reply to this comment
- Why do conservatives hate America so much?
- Reply to this comment





