contemporary poetry

Want - A Poem by Ananya S. Guha - Appreciate Language and Form through the Best Contemporary Poetry

Want – A Poem by Ananya S. Guha

Wherever you go
the sparring want
the dubious jaunt
faces gaunt
poverty impoverished
not ever to be replenished
we cry, we protest
Is this all a test
not far are gallows
in eyes that are hollow
a country burns, another
turns impostor
one is pleading,
the other misleading
one is a bully
the other sulky
one wants doles
another picks holes
one says disarmament
the other says missile
come we all imbecile, docile
we know that wherever we
go there is the ranting want.

Did You Know - A Poem by Richard Kalfus - Appreciate Language and Form through the Best Contemporary Poetry

Did You Know – A Poem by Richard Kalfus

When illness strikes
controlling your life.
When pain is a nasty daily visitor
holding you tight
in the grip of old age.

When what remains
are aging memories
of a partner loved
of children young and once dependent
of adults who now need you less
while you yearn to be needed more.

Some turn to faith as a consoling force.
But I have burned those bridges long ago.
For God is no longer a redeeming force.

Yet I have found a way
To console my day
To turn my winter years
Into May.
I look to poetry
In its magical world
And find words
Which give life to my soul.

While writing I am free
So very briefly
from daily Angst
from memories of a past lost.
And I hope again for a new May.
When at my computer
I find the path
once covered with grief
to live now in the present day.

Longevity - A Poem by Ananya S. Guha - Appreciate Language and Form through the Best Contemporary Poetry

Longevity – A Poem by Ananya S. Guha

Longevity is everybody’s business, how old are you,
have the pills, don’t forget
the blood pressure. Have your lipid profile done once
a year for good measure.
Be sure the sugar is not high, but if your hair is white, then you
will be blackening it, all the night.

A Choiceless Choice - A Poem by Richard Kalfus - Appreciate Language and Form through the Best Contemporary Poetry

A Choiceless Choice – A Poem by Richard Kalfus

They had managed to escape Vienna
before the Nazis marched in.
Thanks to the support of an American cousin
they settled in Washington Heights —
a Manhattan haven for Jewish refugees
Others were not so lucky.
Kurt, the couple’s 5 year-old son,
bore the name of the grandfather
In Treblinka he was gassed.

Adjustment was not easy: they needed jobs
They were lucky: he a butcher; she a seamstress
Fluency in English not a necessity

We now meet Kurt at 20 in 1965
and the girlfriend Gerorgann,
who was the love of his life.
She was mature, tender, optimistic and kind.
The two spent hours talking on the phone,
Taking long walks in the neighborhood
Eating pizza at the local hangout,
Doing homework in one of their homes

One summer evening they made love.
And everything changed.
Theirs would be a love, growing stronger
each day.

So what was the problem
of two people in love?
For In the eyes of the parents
the love could not be
Their despair had no bottom.
How could this be true?
The boy’s Jewish soul
was bound to the suffering of many.
How could Kurt forget?
His very name tied to the Uncle who perished.

The family held council… uncles, aunts cousins alike
A mafia-like meeting of gun-toting gangsters?
No guns, but the weapon was GUILT
All denounced the relationship
with passionate conviction
An affront to the very core
of their Jewish past, present and future.

Kurt was given a choice: keep the girl and lose the family
A choiceless choice
He chose the family

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