[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1997, Book I)]
[January 20, 1997]
[Pages 46-47]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks at the Inaugural Luncheon
January 20, 1997

    Thank you very much. First let me thank Senator Warner and Senator 
Ford, Speaker Gingrich, Leader Gephardt, Senator Lott, Senator Daschle, 
the Inaugural committee for the wonderful job they did with the morning 
ceremony. I thank all the participants. My good friend Jessye Norman, 
thank you. You were magnificent. And I thank Santita Jackson and all the 
choirs who sang today. They were wonderful. And I thank my friend of 
nearly 25 years Miller Williams for that wonderful poem. I will take it 
as an admonition and keep it close to my heart. Thank you.
    Hillary and Chelsea and I have had a wonderful day. We got up early 
and went to a church service, and it ran a little late; Reverend Jackson 
was speaking. [Laughter] It wasn't his fault; we all were carried away. 
And it put us all in the right frame of mind for this happy moment.
    I feel a great deal of gratitude for many things, but Senator, when 
I heard you telling that fascinating story of the fight between 
President Roosevelt and Harry Byrd, Sr., I felt an enormous amount of 
gratitude that at least so far you have not released the letter you made 
me write you to make sure we could hold this ceremony today. [Laughter] 
And I thank you for that.
    We've been doing this a long time, our country has, and I just want 
to say to all of you that I worked for a long time on what exactly I 
would say today, and I believe it very much. I believe we're at a unique 
moment in history. I believe that the only problems we've never solved 
in America are the problems of the heart, particularly relating to race. 
We get better at them, but we've never quite gotten over it.
    I believe that it is more possible to imagine our future and shape 
it now than at any time in the history of the country, with the 
exception of our entry into the industrial age, when we also had peace 
and prosperity, and our entry into the 19th century, when Thomas 
Jefferson decided to buy Louisiana, a decision that Senator Lott and I 
especially appreciate--[laughter]--and a lot of others.
    So this is a unique moment. And because it is, to some extent, 
without precedent and

[[Page 47]]

because it is different, we have to imagine the future before we can 
create it. And when you do something like that, it requires you to make 
alliances and get outside of barriers that normally govern your lives. 
So I meant very much what I said about the bipartisan nature of our 
common task. And tomorrow we will start to work on it.
    For today, I think we should all, as the previous speakers have 
said, enjoy being Americans, enjoy the parade, enjoy the balls, but most 
of all, enjoy the great gift of our citizenship.
    Thank you, and God bless you all.

Note: The President spoke at 2:25 p.m. in Statuary Hall at the Capitol. 
In his remarks, he referred to vocalists Jessye Norman and Santita 
Jackson; and poet Miller Williams of Arkansas. Prior to the President's 
remarks, Senator John Warner, chairman, Joint Congressional Committee on 
Inaugural Ceremonies, introduced the President, and Senator Wendell H. 
Ford, committee vice-chairman, presented him with an engraved crystal 
bowl.