You stand before the Jefferson Memorial, where white marble curves into a calm geometry of ideals. Across the Tidal Basin, reflections tremble slightly—the monument steady, the water honest about movement. Inside the colonnade, words hover like a second architecture. The language of liberty and reason feels elevated here, yet also complicated by everything that followed: the gap between the clean sentence and the messy nation. As you look around, notice how this place invites two kinds of thought at once: admiration for a vision, and scrutiny of its limits. The memorial is less an endpoint than a prompt—asking what a republic owes to its principles, and what it owes to the people living under them.