He wrote in two languages and lived in none. He walked barefoot through the burning questions of his time, clothed only in rage and tenderness. Born Vaidyanath Mishra under a thatched roof in a Bihar village, he became Yatri in Maithili and Nagarjun in Hindi, a people’s poet who spat fire and whispered grief in the same breath. A Buddhist monk turned Marxist, he could chant the Dhammapada and denounce the state with equal ease. He wandered not just across geographies but through the inner map of a fractured nation, speaking for farmers, women, fakirs, insurgents, and the landless.

Nagarjun’s literary output was vast, fearless, and genre-defying. His major poetry collections include Yugdhara , Kal Aur Aaj , Satrange Pankhon Wali , Talab Ki Machhliyan, Khichri , Viplav Dekha Humn

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