The Idiot Poem by Leo Yankevich

The Idiot

Rating: 3.1


Whenever I sit with the village idiot,
it's always with genuine reverence and a bit
of suspicion. Usually we just stare at the rooks,
and he sips my beer without asking, then looks
deranged as if to say he's sorry. He knows enough
about me to know I like diamonds in the rough.
And, strangely, he and I always notice the same things:
hieroglyphs in the snow, tiny holes in our fillings.
When he's not around, my wife says he's a blackguard
and a parasite, a charlatan, and a drunkard;
and I try to explain that he's just the village idiot,
and that once in a while it's necessary to sit
with him and share a pint. Later, when she falls asleep,
out of pity and out of love, I allow him to sneak
into her bed and fondle her thin white thighs,
and, if she doesn't protest, to spend the night.



—first published in The Windsor Review

COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Michael Shepherd 21 September 2004

It's curious - I was privileged to have an eccentric and huge-hearted friend, who disguised it well in a modest compromise of social acceptability; yet this evokes his essence totally. Thanks.

0 0 Reply
READ THIS POEM IN OTHER LANGUAGES
Leo Yankevich

Leo Yankevich

Farrell, Pennsylvania
Close
Error Success