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Mr. President and Great Grandfather
I wander through a gravel path,
surrounded by flowers of purple and red.
A butterfly quivers its wings hardly,
flies over me struggle like it is going to fall at any minutes.
After a corner turned,
the air becomes solemn silence.
A tomb made by white marble stands alone
in the middle of a well-cut lawn,
on the left, a tiny American flag lays in the windless air
lazily.
The tomb reads FRANKLIN DELANO ROOSEVELT 1882-1945.
The man once was the most powerful person of the free world,
now he lies underground
vulnerably
like everyone else,
like my great grandfather from China,
even ordinary people like you and me can
stand above him.
There is an old saying in China:
You brought nothing when you came, so you will bring nothing with you when you are gone.
Mr. Roosevelt was
the president of the United States,
my great grandfather was a poor farmer.
Mr. Roosevelt won World War II,
my great grandfather starved to death in the People’s Commune Movement.
But they ended up the same:
decomposing into the dirt.
Something doesn’t seem right, does it?
what is the meaning of life
when there will always be an end, that
everything we had achieved
disappears;
when the power of death
strips us naked
from the bubbles of the human society,
Would my great grandfather agree that there is a meaning of life,
when he and millions of other commune farmers became proofs of “Communism doesn’t work that way”?
Would Mr. Roosevelt agree that there is a meaning of life,
when he found out that after all the great things he had achieved, he was going to end up like an old man from China that he never heard before?
I’m not Mr. Roosevelt nor my great grandfather, but I know they would.
I know it because
I see respect
in old people’s eyes when they visit the cemetery.
Mr. Roosevelt led them out of the shadow of the Great Depression.
I know it because,
I see happy and healthy families crowded in the reunion dinner of Chinese New Year.
My great grandfather could save the food for himself,
but he left the food to his wife and three children.
They would tell us if they are here, that
it is not how rich or powerful you are, but
the things you left to others really matter.
Although Mr. Roosevelt’s flesh was dead, America remains a great nation.
Although My great grandfather’s life was sacrificed, his family’s lives were insured.
It is because of them,
I can be in this garden and watch
the butterfly flies into the forest
with a full pack of pollen.
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My name is Jun, I'm from Guangzhou, China. This is a walk-around poem I wrote when I visited the FDR Museum in Poughkeepsie. During the visit, I saw the cemetery of Franklin Roosevelt, and it strangely reminds me of my great grandfather, who starved to death during the People's Commune Movement (Launched from 1958 to 1983 in China). I found it interesting that my great grandfather and Franklin Roosevelt had completely different lives, one was powerful, the other was small, but yet they ended up the same, die like everyone else on this planet. It made me think about what is the meaning of life if we are essentially going to die, so I wrote this poem. This is the first poem I have ever written in English, I hope you would like it.