poetry online

Night and Day He Was the One - A Poem by Donal Mahoney - Read Poetry Online by Talented Contemporary Poets

Night and Day He Was the One – A Poem by Donal Mahoney

There’s a glorious sound system now
in the restored train depot where recruits
from all over the nation once took a
train to Camp Breckinridge before
taking a plane to Korea.

A fellow who came back from Korea
stopped in at the depot on one leg
recently for a moment of nostalgia.
A burger and fries cost him 20 bucks,
up from the two bucks he paid in ’51.
And the music was not quite the same.

A waiter in a bow tie and derby said
they still had the old juke box,
the big Wurlitzer, in the basement
under a sheet or a shroud.
Plug it in and give it a quarter
and he said old Frank would sing.

More at http://booksonblog12.blogspot.com.

'Send' - A Poem by Daipayan Nair - Read Poetry Online by Talented Contemporary Poets

'Send' – A Poem by Daipayan Nair

I hear a proposal
that starts with a ‘send’
and ends with the same.

When have I not sent?
Only that I try to recall
what I had sent
and fail miserably.

I feel out of stock
all of a sudden.

I feel, she is much
more capable than my giving.

There are chances,
I may not even understand

how much
she will return.

I am failing at present
on ‘how much she can’.

More at http://daipayannair.wordpress.com.

Traffic - A Poem by Shirley Jones-Luke - Read Poetry Online by Talented Contemporary Poets

Traffic – A Poem by Shirley Jones-Luke

For years cars wouldn’t drive
down our street, even in broad daylight,

pigeons and sparrows would hang
out on the telephone wires above our house,

a yellow and brown triple decker with
concrete steps and a mahogany-colored,

foyer, the door to the building
was never locked and would swing open

when the occasional truck drove
by carrying materials for new homes far

from our street, a different neighborhood
with tree-lined sidewalks, pristine parks

with inviting playgrounds, cool sprinklers
and welcoming benches to watch the world,

go by, cars would be near, parked and gleaming
in the sun, neighbors would gather to chat as their

children ran with abandon in the park, chasing
pigeons and each other until the street lights came

on and it was time to go home for dinner,
back to the two-car garages and the cars on

the street at the end of the day, glistening
now under the stars, silent sentries of the

homes and people who live in them, while
our street is empty, vacant and unguarded.

Oncology - A Poem by Stan Morrison - Read Poetry Online by Talented Contemporary Poets

Oncology – A Poem by Stan Morrison

medical advances only offer slim chances
like raffle tickets loaded with unpleasantness
empty your bank account, ride at your own risk
side effects outnumber the therapeutic promises
while “quality of life” is given homage so glibly
the oncologist is just trying to make a living
“survive my poisons and you’ve got it made”
decades of stagnant statistics
masquerading as great progress
walk jog run swim for the cure
Galen remedies dare you to try
American medicine delights in self-adulation
everyone smiling on the evening news report

—–
Galen was a Dark Ages physician. Burns were often treated by pouring hot oil on them. Survival was very much in question. Galen once wrote that his methods worked in nearly every instance, or sometimes the patient just died.

Best Poetry Online