• "The Fool On the Hill" is a Portrait of THE =?UTF-8?B?TUFIQVJJU0hJPw==?=

    From nyarlathotep1@nyarlathotep1@hotmail.com (Norbert) to rec.music.beatles on Fri Feb 7 21:33:38 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.music.beatles

    I don't think I ever suspected that this song was about a specific real
    person, I had a friend who thought it was about Galileo, but I never
    bought it; in every portrait of the astronomer I've seen, he appeared
    greatly dignified and not foolish.

    However, in his The Lyrics book, McCartney says the "fool" is the
    Maharishi, and adds: "All in all, I think "The Fool on the Hill" is a
    very complimentary portrait and presents the Maharishi as having the
    capacity to keep perfectly still in the midst of the hurly-burly. He's admirably self-contained and doesn't pay much attention to popular
    opinion. He's a person who is open to ridicule because of his beliefs,
    but his beliefs may well be right. I think he may be related somehow to
    the truth-telling fool in King Lear."


    These are benevolent but inaccurate sentiments towards a sexual and
    financial predator, which is what the Maharishi really was.


    "Fool" is a great song, though. Lennon, in "Sexy Sadie" got far closer
    to the truth about the guru -- whose giggling I ascribe to Duper's
    Delight.
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