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    POSITION:CODVIP|CODVIP slot machine|CODVIP slot sites > CODVIP > gold99 Two Poems By Pandurang Gaonkar

    gold99 Two Poems By Pandurang Gaonkar

    Updated:2024-10-07 10:28    Views:200

    Photo by Biplov Bhuyan via Getty ImagesBombshell - Cease Fire Photo by Biplov Bhuyan via Getty Images Bombshell - Cease Fire Photo by Biplov Bhuyan via Getty Images info_icon

    Cease Fire

    By the pond, by the river

    On the beach, under the banyan,

    Below lush foliage of a tree,

    Or even just a few feet below the three coconut palms that merge in the sky

    You do not meet poetry anywhere now.

    By the back door of a deserted house

    Blown up by a rocket

    Our poems which reject war

    Lie bloodied

    Punctured by a sniper from an unidentified nest.

    It would have been you and me, no?

    Lying hand-in-hand, buried under the rubble of the house

    Knocked down by the rocket which dodged the Iron Dome's gaze.

    Photographers click away

    At your hands and mine

    Which have risen

    From the pile of bricks

    To demand a cease-fire.

    null - nullThree Poems On Mother's Day By Moumita Alam

    BY Moumita Alam

    Reformer

     

    Poetry stands in queue

    At the revolution square

    Just like burning candles

    At a protest meet.

    They brand everyone a sham,

    Those intellectuals who speak in assembly lines

    Journalists jot down notes furiously line after line.

    After long, very long-winded introductions

    The protest march begins.

    After submitting a representation at the police station

    All the reformers fade into darkness, disappearing in line, one after another.

    It has been a month since

    The woman in whose name

    The agitation was staged had died.

    But no one seems to care anymore,

    After putting her memory behind them

    The reformers buy a pregnancy test-kit from a pharmacy at their wife’s request

    And head home in the darkness, in line, one after another.

    (These poems were originally written in Konkani by Pandurang Gaonkargold99, a journalist and poet based in Goa, and translated by Mayabhushan Nagvenkar)