I don't know if you have noticed, but the traffic situation in Kanpur is a lot better these days. Now there are real traffic lights. And many of them even work, going from red to green to red and so on. One day, I was driving with a veteran Kanpur-wallah sitting beside me. The light turned red and I brought the car to a halt (which wasn't a large state change anyhow, but that is another story). "What are you doing?" asked my friend. "Why? Can't you see that red light?" "What's wrong with you? Do you want to be challaned or what?" rebuked my friend. "Who ever heard of stopping at a RED light?" Indeed, even as he spoke a tempo came up behind me, squeezed past a recumbent cow and pushed its nose into the intersection. A foolish bicyclist coming from the left was forced to stop. I say foolish because he was no doubt under the impression that his green light meant he had right of way. The tempo chugged on relentlessly, and the bicycle backed up. I felt suddenly elevated, as if witnessing the passage of a ship of rare majesty. "Dheuguli nirupay bhange du-dhare", Tagore had said - the waters parting helplessly at the bow. I released my clutch and started forward, feeling ashamed at my ignorance of Kanpur traffic rules. In life one learns. One becomes wiser. We were driving to a restaurant called Little Chef. This particular restaurant is located on a road very carefully designed to be difficult to locate. It is like a fold in the map - one moment you are almost there, and next moment you are somewhere quite different. You are almost there when you reach the intersection with the unmanned traffic police pedestal. I mean this pedestal, in the center of a major intersection, umbrella roof and all, has simply never been manned. I mean, it is often dog-ged and occasionally cow-ed as well, but never is it man-ned. In any event, you know that you are near Little Chef here - in fact, you can just about smell the hamburgers - but then suddenly you are in Parade, which you know is not where Little Chef is. It is like you fold your newspaper, and Madhuri Dixit on page 2 is lifting up a cricket cup on page 14. Distance vanishes in that fold of the map, and you can put Moscow right next to Delhi. Physicists say that space in our universe may be like that, with lots of folds in the map. I don't know about the Universe, but Kanpur is certainly a fold in the map. You can never find it. So we decide to ask some enlightened ones. Yes, there is this pan vendor. No he has not heard of any little shef. There is a customer with moustache, which undulates under his chewing motion. He looks at us as if he has something to say. He raises his hand, and expectantly we await the maha sambhashan. With a majestic quiver of a majestic moustache he turns to the roadside and spits his majestic red glob. And then he turns to us: "You mean Littel CHIEF? No problem. Go this way, and then the first turn right." Oops. We stand corrected. Hail the Chief, not the Shef! This is Kanpur, not Par-ee. One learns. One un-learns. One becomes wiser. Sometime later we come to a really big crossing. It is in fact so impressively big, that the imaginative locals call it "BIG FOUR-WAY CROSSING." There is a traffic pedestal in the middle, and - wonders will never cease - there is a policeman on duty, complete with uniform! He has raised his palm as if he wants our line of traffic to stop. The right turn lane facing us is now turning. Should I stop, or would would that be a display of further ignorance? Just then a motorcycle ambles up besides me and continues ambling. The policeman indicates to the traffic on the left and signals it to pass through. In that split seccond, before the heaving mass can tumble and stagger forward in honking confusion, our motorcyclist has revved up his amble rate and disappeared into the sunset. All this while I was also ambling forward next to the motorcycle, revelling in my new-found kanpur-wallah spirit. Now suddenly I find myself stranded, in the middle of the crossing, almost blocking the surge about to come from the left. I quickly look back and am deftly reversing into a small crevice while avoiding crushing the bicyclist crossing the road behind me when my friend says: "What are you doing that for?" "Can't you see? I am too far ahead!" I tell him, my hand behind his headrest. "This time you have really done it," he says. "You are simply asking to be challaned! What rotten luck!" "But don't you think I am more likely to be challaned if I am blocking the middle of the road?" I can see the policeman looking at me from his pedestal. Is that a glint of greed that I see in his eyes? "You see, you are in a car," lectures my friend. "You are a big shot. The minister is your mama and your nephew is the IG. So you have every business to be standing in the middle of the biggest crossing in Kanpur." And now he thrusts in the knife. "But then you start backing up, showing concern for the law, not to mention the insignificant hoi polloi on the other side. What does that tell Mr. Police Man? Quick Challan bucks, that's what." Suddenly he becomes energized - "OK - go now - zip it before he nabs you". The traffic has thinned from the left and I shoot through the opening, the policeman a wistful blur. Sometimes one runs away. But one becomes wiser. On the way back I am on a side road waiting to enter the traffic. A policeman stands in the intersection, lackadasically controlling traffic. He notices my car and waves me through. I start moving forward confidently. A tempo bristling with milk cans and bangles descends on me screaming like a banshee and narrow misses my left fender. A hundred eyes pour their hatred on me the car-wallah. "What do you think you are doing?" Asks my friend. "Didn't you see the traffic from that side?" "But then, that policeman signalled for me ... " I trail off. "Who is doing the driving? You, or the policeman?" "But shouldn't the policeman have stopped the traffic on the other road before letting me thrugh?" "What do you think is the policeman's job? Get this straight: YOUR job is to prevent accidents. HIS job is to collect money from ALL sides whenever there is an accident. So you do your job, and don't get near him when he is doing his." Indeed what could be simpler - every man to his job. That's what Nelson said, didn't he - "England expects every man to do his duty." That's how the big battles are won. Certainly in Kanpur. Policemen. Tagore. Nelson. Paris. The amount one learns just driving around Kanpur. I strongly recommend it to those interested in rapid education. And anyhow, the traffic situation has improved a lot. Why, they even have traffic lights. And they work! As for myself, though, don't expect me to take this course too often. I have become wiser. A lot wiser. At least about driving in Kanpur.