I love you,
You are so good!
You pledge your life
For a square meal,
Day you toil and night
You sleep and populate,
Evening you smoke, play cards,
Drink tea, gossip, and pass
Hay days!
Then suddenly comes
Second childhood, and you
Wait for the last day,
And die.
Silently you come,
And silently you go,
No rupture, no ripple,
You leave.
Such a beautiful life,
Ah! Such a marvellous life,
You live!
I envy you, my villagers,
You are too good,
No storm, no wave, no wind,
Rages your heart,
So stagnant and sterile,
So dull and cozily cocooned
You are!
You are not hunters,
You are not woodmen,
Townsmen you not,
You were paddy and jute men,
Now you are landless labour!
And you never pine,
And pine for what?
You are fulcrums,
And with your grease
The earth eases its load.
You are not warriors,
But each day is a war day
To you!
And you war not for lands
Women or gold,
You war for the stomachs
Of your children,
And I don’t blame you,
My villagers,
You are too good!
2 Comments
Sir, it is too much heart touching … As my father is also a farmer
thank you Dipankar for reading the poem and realising its essence .