“History repeats itself, that’s one of the things that’s wrong with history.” -Clarence Darrow

Last Seen: The Ship of Fools is Sailing Down the Jhelum

by | May 25, 2008 | Blog

Afshana looks around at jokers plying their trades and sees a theater of the absurd!

(Ms. Syeda Afshana, 34, was born in Srinagar. She attended the Vishwa Bharti High School in Rainawari, Srinagar, and the Government Women’s College in Srinagar where she received a B.Sc. degree. She completed her Master’s degree in Mass Communication and Journalism from the Kashmir University in 1999 and was the Gold Medallist (first position holder) in her graduating class. She is currently a Lecturer in the Media Education Research Centre (MERC) of the Kashmir University and pursuing her doctorate on the role of internet after 9/11.)

We: The Bunch of Fools!



“No pity, Lord could

change the heart

From red with wrong

to white as wool:

The rod must heal the sin;

but, Lord,

Be merciful to me, a fool!….

‘Tis not by guilt

the onward sweep

Of truth and right,

O lord, we stay;

Tis by our follies

that so long

We hold the earth

from heaven away….

Our faults no tenderness

should ask,

The chastening stripes

must cleanse them all;

But for our blunders –

oh, in shame

Before the eyes

of heaven we fall….

Earth bears no

balsam for mistakes;

Men crown the Knave,

and scourge the tool

That did his will;

but Thou, O Lord,

Be merciful to me, a fool!”….

(The Jester’s Prayer by Edward Rowland)

In 1494, a German humanist and satirist Sebastian Brant wrote a famous allegory, ‘The Ship of Fools,” wherein he depicted 110 varied follies and vices, each undertaken by a different fool. A ship encumbered with fools and steered by fools to the fools’ paradise unites a common theme, shaping a long moralistic poem that lashes at the medieval grotesqueries, especially the abuses in the church.

Since fools have a place in world, Brant satirized through them. They form a vital character that melts the toughness of world by maintaining dual realistic and fantastic perspective.

Perhaps, human beings need the fool. He is, at times, a subtle teacher and a real instructor. Tickling and amusing, he supposedly thwarts situations that are outrageous and atrocious to survive. As pointed in Cervantes’ Don Quixote:-

“O sir!…may God forgive you for the wrong you have done in robbing the world of the most diverting madman who was ever seen. Is it not plain, sir, that his cure can never benefit mankind half as much as the pleasure he affords by his eccentricities?”

Even the Shakespearean fool is an influential character. He usually speaks nonsense and yet divulges the truth. When all others live in distortion, it’s his distorted world that turns out to be a reality.

The most famous fool of Shakespeare is ‘The Fool’ in King Lear, the character with no name other than fool. When Lear is deserted by his unfaithful daughters, it’s only The Fool who accompanies the King as his only courtier. Similarly, when the King steadily slides into lunacy, he and his fool change places. Paradoxically, The Fool incessantly tells him sense—

‘Have more than thou showest,

Speak less than thou knowest,

Lend less than thou owest,

Ride more than thou goest,

Learn more than thou trowest

Set less than you throwest.

(King Lear)

Literary instances apart, the fact is that fools are not the only ‘foolish’. A person happens to be a fool when he does a foolish act. Stupidity cannot be limited to any particular group of people. Every so often, the people we look up to most make the biggest fools of themselves. Their buffoonery does not carry any covert sense. They are out-and-out idiots.

Politicians of all hues form the major lot and so do their blind followers. Both hoodwink the realities foolishly. Leaders shout and people sway. Empty slogans and pipe dreams, leaders sell them off mindlessly. Gullible masses take them flatly. Rationale and reason is bogged down by silliness.

Public mind is generally listless because of life pressures. It stops analysis and assessment after a certain period. More so, conflict of any kind makes it comatose. The level of timidity slowly droops into foolishness.

Like Brant’s voyage to fools’ paradise, people yearn and wait for things impossible. Leaders wish to become national heroes. Politicos feel to be godfathers. Doctors crave to be Hippocrates. Engineers hope to be booming builders. Lawyers pine to be just winners. Businessmen desire to be millionaires. Bosses aspire to be demigods. Teachers long to be role-models. Students want to be all-time achievers …blah blah.

Of course, all these high goals are not apparently unattainable but what makes them so is the corruption of mind that aims tall. When the basic standard of morality decays, the human mind loses its right to think big. And if it still does, it smacks of thorough foolishness. This is where the irony begins. People start carrying bloated misconceptions about themselves. They conceive to be the wisest of all! And this happens to be the chronic symptom of their foolishness—

“The fool doth think himself wise, but the wise man knows himself to be a fool” (As You Like It).

The follies are committed by everyone. Prudent people learn from them. Fools do not. They goof unremittingly.

And imagine some of such fools becoming the vanguards of any nation. It is no less than any cataclysm. And more deplorable is the presence of foolish followers, the incredulous and naïve ones who shout and scream for things absolutely incomprehensible and unfathomable to them.

O Lord, be merciful to us, the fools!