| Wall in waiting, wall unfinished |
That pulls East Indians from their usual torpor,
And sets them working even in the hot-hot sun,
Building walls where oft there is no need
| First, build a wall |
In colourful saris, with bare feet and hands.
The men direct or simply stand and watch:
But they must supervise all working women,
To ensure top quality.
| A necessary but useless sign |
Anyone would bother building them at all.
But an Indian wall may serve
And least of all to keep things in or out.
That all detect it when they’re passing by:
‘Hold your nose or use a handkerchief?'
The smell of urine reeks and lingers long.
But there is also more:
| Construction waste by wire fence |
For throwing litter, garbage and all else.
Here there is no need for proper landfills:
The walls provide a perfect place for all.
| The bigger the better, but what for...? |
If one dares to ask the question ‘why?’,
I wonder if it might put a notion
'Why do we build so many walls? Could we
Not build something else more useful?
But here there are no toilets,
And Indian men prefer to pee on walls.
So never mind the walling in or walling out,
As cows and goats and pigs roam free as birds.
| Train tracks also make good toilets! |
Common sense – and toilets.
To organize and plan, as other peoples do.
Then maybe they could stop wall building
