English, asked by dharaswarup2004, 4 months ago

AUTO BIOGRAPHY OF AN INDIAN BAZAR

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Answered by anushka0304
2

Answer:

INDIAN BAZAR:

A soon as a shopper enters a bazaar, the first thing he comes into contact with, is noise, confusion and crowd. He finds the bazaar alive with the cries of venders, smell of cattle and cow dung, children playing games or scuffling the gutter to find a lost coin. Cows move through the crowd searching for tidbits of stale discarded eatables. Those, who can dare, help themselves at open stalls. The blare of loudspeaker playing a popular song of Lata Mangeshkar or another popular singer can also be heard.

The sight of beggars in an Indian bazaar is a common sight, half naked ill old men, children and women-all begging and hardly getting anything. Once in a while, sometimes to appease his or her own conscience, someone gives a coin to one of them. As it is a common sight, people buy and sell without giving to the deplorable condition of the beggar except perhaps a neutral observer and once in a million, something is tried to better their conditions.

Products and articles of the same kind are bunched together. For example, the stalls of grains and corn like wheat, pulse rice, grain, maize, sesame etc. can be seen together. The stalls of various vegetables and fruits are put together in one corner, beside the stalls of sherbet and fruit juice, along with stalls of seasonal fruits and other fruits.

Clothes, readymade and pieces of clothe are decorated in many shops and stalls. Four or five shops containing mobiles recharge equipment and mobile parts are also visible there.

Villagers can be seen with lots of products on their heads or carts, who come there to sell their products or can be seen returning laden with their purchase.

We should not forget the matter of bargain while this sale purchase goes on. There is no fixed price. It is the quality of Indian purchaser who visits these bazaars that he cannot buy without bargaining. Never ever that price is given or received which was uttered first. Then both are happy, and the transaction is over.

When we talk about an Indian bazaar, it is impossible not to be reminded of Sarojini Naidu’s famous poem, In the Bazaars of Hyderabad, which describes the various stalls in the bazaars of Hyderabad as well as the cultural and social life of the city. Indian customs and tradition and folk theme are presented there which is true for every Indian city’s bazaars. No poem, no article can describe an Indian bazaar so completely, so adroitly and so beautifully. If you have read that poem, there is no need to read anything else except visiting a real Indian bazaar in your town and realize its true cultural, romantic and entertaining joyous atmosphere.

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