An Indian Fool Poem by Bijay Kant Dubey

An Indian Fool



If you have to meet him, you may in the countryside,
An Indian fool with a clamp of hair hanging
From the crown of the head
At the back of
And he oiling the bamboo stick daily
To thrash the head of.

To pull the lathi and to thrash from the behind,
Not from the front
The frontal attack,
But from the sideways
Hurting you.

An Indian fool with a clamp of hair hanging,
But on with the clamp of hair may be a great Sanskritist,
Classical,
But take for granted he is not
A scholar, but a countryside rustic.

If you say right, he will understand wrong,
So blind, so superstitious,
So poor and backward
That he can go to any extent
And can humiliate you.

He cannot say the name of his wife,
Will lie in to keep her indoors,
May ask his daughter,
Why did you smile on seeing the boys,
Always suspicious and suspectful?

If his daughter smiles, he will ask her,
Why did you,
Smile on seeing,
People will take it bad,
As you a growing child.

An Indian fool with the tikki hanging from,
Angry, mad and foolish with a thick lathi into hands,
The arm tattoed with Sita-Ram,
Going his away
Taking the name of ‘Bajarangabali ki jai’.

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