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Inauguration Day different than in 2009, but weight of history still felt by attendees

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(MCT) — WASHINGTON — Beyonce had belted her last note and President Barack Obama, newly sworn in for a second term, had grabbed his last hand and given his last hug. But as he walked off the inauguration platform and through an archway to the Capitol, the president turned again to face the people who came to see him.

“I want to take a look one more time,” Obama said, stopping his Secret Service detail. He smiled, eyes fixed in the distance. “I’m not going to see this again.”

What Obama saw was a throng of Americans filling their capital on Monday. They were waving their country’s flag, cheering their president, honoring their history and celebrating their government, adding a sheen of celebratory unity to a capital more accustomed to political division.

Hazel Carter from Springfield, Ohio, who is 90 and who attended Obama’s first swearing-in, had vowed not to miss this one: “I prayed, ‘God, just let me keep breathing until the inauguration.’”

Charlie and Zan Thompson, African-Americans in their 60s, flew in from Phoenix, despite Charlie’s bad knee. Zan pushed her husband in a wheelchair for 45 minutes to the National Mall. She could persevere, she said, just as the president had in his first term.

And Patrecia McClein, 39, was there even though she and her husband Shawn, 37, went to bed Sunday night in Rochester, N.Y., with no plans to be in Washington.

“The Lord woke us up at 1 a.m. and told us to come,” she said.

Hundreds of thousands of people filled Washington’s streets, far less than the estimated 1.8 million who attended Obama’s first inauguration. The differences from 2009 were notable. The traditional lineup of events — the swearing-in outside the Capitol’s West Front, parade down Pennsylvania Avenue and night of balls — were all less complicated without the crush of humanity drawn to the first inauguration of the first African-American president.

There were other shifts in mood — expectations lowered after years of partisan gridlock, hopes weathered by disappointment, toes warmed by noticeably higher temperatures.

Still, the attendees said they felt the weight of history.

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