The New Verse News presents politically progressive poetry on current events and topical issues.
Guidelines
Submission Guidelines: Send 1-3 unpublished poems in the body of an email (NO ATTACHMENTS) to nvneditor[at]gmail.com. No simultaneous submissions. Use "Verse News Submission" as the subject line. Send a brief bio. No payment. Authors retain all rights after 1st-time appearance here. Scroll down the right sidebar for the fine print.
AI-generated graphic by NightCafé for The New Verse News.
Let’s say there’s no judge, it's just us, you and me, and all of our peers, deliberating, pontificating, confabulating.
Awaiting our verdict, segregated in the balcony, sit two made motherless in Minnesota next to two made fatherless in Utah, and our children, with all of their peers.
Opposing solicitors dance before us, profiteers play up our fears, until we are hung—and together, pile more dead upon the plates, to lie with all of our peers.
The left and right arms of our scales tilt and totter with each fresh body, the chains grown too taut, not made for the weight of revenge.
Rick Pongratz is an emerging poet. His poetry has appeared in Rattle and is forthcoming in Frogpond. Rick works as a mental health clinician and currently studies creative writing at Idaho State University.
George Eliot prayed that she reach the purest heaven; be the cup of strength to those in agony. I cannot seem to save myself.
I pray only to survive while grasping at the crumbling edges of a giant hole into which I fall. I cannot seem to save myself.
I try to smile, try to join in, feed pure love, ignore the vile, turn the world back to being kind. I cannot seem to find the time.
What sweet luxury Channing had, to advise we “bear all cheerfully… await occasions, hurry never.” I cannot seem to find the time.
I don’t want to live in a world where immigrants are not respected or given dignity. And yet it seems I do.
I don’t want to live in a world where women bleed out in cars because craven doctors betray oaths to care for us. And yet it seems I do.
Better Buddhist than bleary-eyed, refusing the light that drives me on to cry for help as we drown. I cannot seem to find the light.
I try the common, I try the quiet, I try to listen then to sing, but stars refuse to shine on me. I cannot seem to find the light.
Ann Grogan is a joyful octogenarian, retired lawyer, and emerging poet who lives in San Francisco, CA. Her writing promotes the unequivocal permission to pursue one’s passions at any age. Her poems have appeared in Little Old Lady, The Prairie Review, Querencia, the University of Vermont’s Continuing Education Newsletter, and on KAWL Public Media “Bay Poets”, and is forthcoming in Amethyst Review. She’s the author of two volumes of poetry, Poetic Musings on Pianos, Music & Life. Her music and poetry website is rhapsodydmb.com.
except for one, eleventh grade, Sequential III, with Mr. G.
He looked like Steven Spielberg with a pocket protector and chalk in hand, a math cult leader who converted the most atheist of math students into a devout follower.
It all made sense in his class: Life and its angled connectivity. It was like having a near-death experience for fifty minutes each day.
He revealed math’s sacred secrets in ways only a child could comprehend. He took away what I hated most: The stifled, confined view of numbers and showed me what it was: a universal balance of unity and truth.
Thirty-five years later, in a world that seems like there’s no sequence at all, we walked and slept through 9/16/25,* the day Pythagoras was Superman, hauling the globe back to harmony.
At the very least, I thought of Mr. G, and how he taught me to see.
* First, "all three of the entries in that date are perfect squares—and what I mean by that is 9 is equal to 32, 16 is equal to 42, and 25 is equal to 52," says Colin Adams, a mathematician at Williams College who was first tipped off about today's special qualities during a meeting with his former student, Jake Malarkey.
Next, those perfect squares come from consecutive numbers—three, four, and five.
But perhaps most special of all is that three, four, and five are an example of what's called a Pythagorean triple.
"And what that means," explains Adams, "is that if I take the sum of the squares of the first two numbers, 32 + 42, which is 9 + 16… is equal to 25, which is 52, so 32 + 42 = 52."
This is the Pythagorean Theorem: a2 + b2 = c2. "And that in fact is the most famous theorem in all of mathematics," says Adams. —NPR, September 16, 2025
Nancy Byrne Iannucci is a librarian and poet who resides in Troy, NY, with her two cats: Nash and Emily Dickinson. THRUSH Poetry Journal, Allegro Poetry Magazine, Eunoia, Maudlin House, San Pedro River Review, 34 Orchard, Bending Genres, and Typehouse are some places you will find her. She is the author of four chapbooks: Temptation of Wood (Nixes Mate Review, 2018), Goblin Fruit (Impspired, 2021), Primitive Prayer (Plan B Press, fall 2022), and Hummingbirds and Cigarettes (Bottlecap Press, 2024). Instagram: @nancybyrneiannucci
Trish Hopkinson is a poet and advocate for the literary arts. You can find her online at SelfishPoet.com. Her poetry has been published in several literary magazines and journals; and her most recent book A Godless Ascends was published by Lithic Press in March 2024. Hopkinson happily answers to labels such as atheist, feminist, and empty nester; and enjoys traveling, live music, and craft beer.
Banksy confirmed he was responsible for the work with a post on Instagram, showing the graffiti before it was covered over. It has been interpreted by some as a comment on the arrest of hundreds of people for supporting Palestine Action by holding up placards at protests. Palestine Action was banned by the government as a terrorist group in July after activists damaged RAF planes. --BBC, September 10, 2025
What was just one raging judge
bludgeoning one poor bloke lying helpless on his back has now been scrubbed into anyone, anywhere where faceless power hammers the harmless: families asleep in wrecked schools and sad tents, thousands on foot, on donkey carts, and in cars fleeing their flattened neighborhoods, starving hundreds shot while crowding for food, the badly wounded and bleeding on their backs begging for mercy. A gray afterimage of the mural remains on the courthouse wall like a blast shadow in Hiroshima, like a black-gray pall of smoke above human beings being burned, like some relentless nightmare ghost that ought to haunt us night and day.
Matthew Murrey is the author of Bulletproof (Jacar Press, 2019) and the forthcoming collection, Little Joy (Cornerstone Press, 2026). Recent poems are in Dissident Voice, Escape Into Life, Tiny Wren Lit, and elsewhere. He was a public school librarian for more than 20 years and lives in Urbana, IL with his partner. He can be found on Bluesky and Instagram under the handle @mytwords.
Nick Fuentes has denied speculation circulating on social media his followers, known as “Groypers,” were responsible for conservative activist Charlie Kirk’s death, after messages on unfired casings written by Kirk’s alleged shooter Tyler Robinson appeared to be linked to the far-right movement. —Forbes, February 13, 2025
A revolution always eats its young,
Devouring true believers in its urge
To prove itself more faithful to the cause.
With cries of heresy on every tongue,
There has to come a fateful final purge,
And then the end. Same as it ever was.
Steven Kent is the poetic alter ego of writer and musician Kent Burnside. His work appears in 251, Asses of Parnassus, Light Poetry Magazine, Lighten Up Online, The New Verse News, The Orchards Poetry Journal, Philosophy Now, Pulsebeat Poetry Journal, The Road Not Taken: A Journal of Formal Poetry, Snakeskin, and Well Read. His collection I Tried (And Other Poems, Too) was published in 2023 by Kelsay Books.
Many people, of course, feel America is broken. You can hear about the country’s many troubles—its ideological divides, its anger, its lack of civility—from conservatives and liberals, from socialist firebrands and evangelical preachers, from Democrats and Republicans. It is, perhaps, one of the few beliefs that unites Americans right now. So many seem to genuinely want those divides to be mended, for the country to be knitted back together. But the question of why America is broken, and who is to blame, and how to repair it? That’s where things get complicated. —Tim Sullivan, AP, September 13, 2025
In the choose-your-own-adventure America, you get to choose which expert to believe, which news source delivers the truth to eyes and ears, which problem needs solution and which solution you like best and think will work and ought, therefore, be funded beyond your wildest ability to count the cents one by one in your little life. So close your eyes and jump to page 47, the just say no, the walls and cages, the answer that puts ever more troops and officers and masks on your streets, the security of surveillance, of armed patrols—here, there, and everywhere. Or jump to page 76 and guns for everyone and self-defense in every hand and every home. Or turn to page 2021: the moment we decide which police we must obey and which we must overrun to guarantee our rights. Or, maybe, see what happens when we choose that page where we realize that schools and social services are less expensive than prisons or where we build villages of tiny homes for our veterans unhoused and struggling instead of casting them, so much chaff, to streets and parks, to make-shift tents, where they like dandelions can sprout in the cracks. Which America will we choose for our families?
Cecil Morris, a retired high school English teacher and Pushcart and Best of the Net nominee, has poems appearing in The 2River View, the Common Ground Review, Hole in the Head Review, TheNew Verse News, Rust + Moth, and elsewhere. His debut poetry collection At Work in the Garden of Possibilities (Main Street Rag) came out in 2025. He and his wife, mother of their children, divide their year between the cool coast of Oregon and the relatively hot Central Valley of California.