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What John F. Kennedy’s Inaugural Speech Can Teach You About Writing a Sentence

"Ask not what your country can do for you." Why one sentence outlived a presidency, and the rhetorical moves you can steal for your own copy.

What John F. Kennedy’s Inaugural Speech Can Teach You About Writing a Sentence

On January 20, 1961, John F. Kennedy spoke for fourteen minutes. Most of it is forgotten. One sentence is not:

“Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country.”

People who never read the speech can quote that line. That is not luck. It is engineering, and the same moves that made it stick will make your headline, your tagline, and your closing line stick too.

The move that made it: reversal

The famous line is a chiasmus, a sentence that says something, then flips it. Structure A-B, then B-A. “Do for you… you can do.” The mirror is satisfying to the ear and easy to remember, because the second half rewards you for holding the first half in your head.

You see the same shape everywhere good copy lives:

The reversal forces a small thought. The reader does a tiny piece of mental work, and we remember what we work for.

The other tools in the speech

Antithesis. Kennedy set opposites against each other constantly: “Let us never negotiate out of fear. But let us never fear to negotiate.” Contrast sharpens meaning the way a dark background sharpens a bright object.

Anaphora. He repeated openings to build rhythm and weight: “Let both sides explore… Let both sides seek… Let both sides unite.” Repetition is not lazy. Controlled, it becomes a drumbeat.

Short, concrete, declarative. Around the soaring lines sat plain ones. “The torch has been passed to a new generation.” Big idea, small words. Power does not come from long words. It comes from clear ones placed in a strong order.

How to use this in your copy

You are not writing a speech. You are writing a subject line, a hero headline, a CTA. The tools shrink, but they work.

Try the reversal on your value proposition. Take your core promise and flip it:

Try antithesis on your hook. Put the wrong belief against the right one in the same breath:

Try anaphora in a list of benefits. Start three lines the same way and let the rhythm carry them.

One warning: these tools amplify whatever they touch. A reversal wrapped around an empty idea is just a clever-sounding nothing. Kennedy’s line endured because the idea underneath it was real and demanding. Get the idea right first. Then sharpen the sentence.

Takeaway: Take your single most important sentence and try flipping it (A-B becomes B-A). If the reversal is also true, you may have just written the line people quote.

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