Answer:
The poem is dedicated to the author's father who was tortured and imprisoned during the Cultural Revolution. In the first stanza of the poem, the author describes how his father was a school principal and one day he caught a carp and everybody in the school tasted it. The poem emphasizes the importance in Chinese culture where it represents perseverance, luck, and success. Paradoxically, Wang writes that her son is named Carp and yet he died an early death. The carp also represents a loss of innocence and the flawed nature of people with the lines "they had tasted the carp". This stanza shows how a good memory turned into a painful one. Once her father was imprisoned, it seemed like that was it. All his luck, and success over being the school principal are gone.
Step-by-step explanation: