My poem entitled “Then and Now”, written at the height of the Covid Pandemic, has been published in Ascensus, the Weill Cornell Medicine Journal of the Humanities. It’s an in-house publication, started in 2013 and run by medical students to showcase the humanities at our medical school.
I was privileged to give a reading of my poem at the Ascensus 11th edition launch reception last evening. It was a joy to be with so many artistically minded medical colleagues, whose works ranged from poetry to prose, photography, painting and music. A special shout out to Courtney Lee for her moving poem “Hoarder”, to Koianka Tencheva, whose poem “My Dowry” brought tears to my eyes and to med student J Lind , whose emotional song lyrics were backed by some serious geetar playing. (You can find more on Spotify…)
Congrats to the Ascensus editorial team for another great edition of this wonderful journal, and to all my colleagues on their submissions.
THEN AND NOW Then We lived in sweet, willful ignorance. Nanoscopic particles bent on our destruction existed, surely, But attacked predictably, and only once a year Allowing us to plan and fortify With protein shields delivered through ethanol swabbed skin. Few fell But those who did Passed within the soft embrace of love Untainted by fear. Then We lived and moved in shared spaces Breathing the same air, Voicing the same songs, Touching without fear, Hands grasping hands, Arms linking arms, Lips grazing lips, cheeks, foreheads. Then We blithely squeezed together in metal tubes beneath the streets, Lined up tightly in shared anticipation, Marched shoulder to shoulder on grand boulevards, Brushed past one another in narrow halls and passages and Mingled sweat and smell in crowded theaters and packed arenas. Now We live in isolation, Faces masked and drawn, Warily walking along emptied streets Past boarded stores and vacant food halls. We line up uneasily, Pass gingerly, Stand separately Love guiltily. Now We live and move in fear Of this new predator And of one another. Those among us who fall (And there are many) Do so alone Or at best, Watched from afar by faces on blue lit screens, Witnessed by swathed strangers Who stroke limp arms through gloved hands And whisper words of comfort That pass between layers of three-ply polymer And ricochet off polyurethane shields. Margaret Polaneczky 11/19/20
Wow
Peg, this is gorgeous and wrenching. You compose poetry like you write your blog, bake your bread, paint your canvasses, arrange your home – like a dream… xoxox
This made me tear up!
A wonderful poem, Peggy. Tough and bracing but full of humanity.
THanks Pat!