Samudrala Avinash Rahul Vamshi Krishna What a long name. Does not sound at all Like the name of someone Who belongs to the proletariat Their names will be Pullaiah and Yellaiah Yours sounds far too sophisticated As sophisticated as your accent, almost like a Brit You say you have bruxism and what not But your accent lives on, on and on... Making people give you a second hearing While at 62 I am searching for my second wind...
And your gonads have not yet started firing Were you crazy then to be stopping by Sundarayya Vignana Kendram in Bagh Lingampally Where that Reddy girl taking courses in statistics Was getting distracted by you, but you were never by her And you stuck to your guns, pretty appropriate metaphor Since Marx and Guevara interested you so much No skirt or some peculiar shade of lipstick Could hold your attention for long...
Being a Naxalite appealed to you as your svadharma Long, long ago, and when I discovered you You were the more sauve urban naxal, so I blocked you Lest I the guy interested more in Maharshi than Marx Be picked up at midnight, because the smokin' gun Of Marxian literature was plenty on my bookshelf I who believed that the stream of truth flows From all sources and not just from some blokes Doing something somewhere in the Himalayas.
Then, you texted me after a long while, saying You were now more moderate in your views Kind of a rare conversion, maybe Rosa Luxemborg Started appealing to you more than Lenin And that writer of The Motorcycle Diaries Though Che never left your bedside and your dreams.
Nowadays, you are more into studying material girls Rather than dialectical materialism, so tell me Where in your heart have you created a cemetery Where you have interred Marx though not Che.
But, my dear chum, or should I call you comrade Listen to me dyed in the whispers down the centuries Not only of the topography including the Himalayas But also including Thames, Seine, and Black Forest Marx was good as far as what he wanted man to be But in what man was now in the present He misread him so badly that his idealism Was bound to come a cropper, though not before Bloody revolutions meted out the karma To all those people who erred in their previous lives When they took birth long before Marx was born Including maybe the likes of Alexander Solzhenistyn For karma is backed by God, not some floundering startup Ah, it satisfies me so much to end with this imagery From Capitalism, and make Marx stir in his grave And rethink his philosophy at least when he is reborn And become an opium addict to discover newer realities.
Philosopher & Poet. Holds degrees in Medicine (MBBS) and Economics (MA, The Johns Hopkins University). Certified programmer. An avid reader. Worked in various capacities as a medical writer, copywriter, copyeditor, software programmer, newspaper columnist, and content writer. Amazon Author Page - https://www.amazon.in/stores/D.-Samarender-Reddy/author/B0CB7PMW36
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