The metaphor now is: I haven't finished what I want to do, and I encourage people around me to redouble their efforts to finish it.
"The revolution has not yet succeeded, and comrades still have to work hard". These two sentences were inscribed by Sun Yat-sen at the Confession Conference of China Kuomintang in 1923, and Wang Jingwei also extracted these two sentences from his political will.
The full text of Sun Yat-sen's will is:
"I devoted myself to the national revolution for forty years, aiming at seeking freedom and equality in China. After 40 years of experience, I know that to achieve this goal, we must arouse the people, unite with the nations that treat me equally in the world, and make joint efforts.
The revolution has not yet succeeded, so all my comrades must continue to work hard to realize the Three People's Principles in accordance with Yu's general program, the Three People's Principles and the Declaration of the First National Congress. Advocate convening a national assembly and abolishing unequal treaties, especially in the shortest possible time. This is what I want! "
Sun Yat-sen is dying, and he still remembers saving the country and the people. At that time, China was in a state of warlord regime, Duan insisted on holding a "aftermath meeting" to divide the spoils among warlords again, so that China continued to be ruled by warlords. Sun Yat-sen, on the other hand, tried his best to seek peaceful reunification, advocated convening a national conference attended by people from all walks of life, decided on the grand plan of national reunification and construction, abolished the unequal treaties imposed on China by imperialism, and got rid of the shackles of politics and economy, thus establishing a new China. In his will, Sun Yat-sen earnestly took this as a training, hoped to "arouse the people" and showed strong patriotic feelings.