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Today's News . . . Today's Poem
The New Verse News
presents politically progressive poetry on current events and topical issues.
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Submission Guidelines: Send 1-3 unpublished poems in the body of an email (NO ATTACHMENTS) to nvneditor[at]gmail.com.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.
Friday, June 13, 2025
TROMPE-L’OEIL
TO THE DEMOCRATS WAITING FOR MIDTERMS TO SAVE US
The dog that will bow
when hearing a growl
to placate the foe
is no longer the way.
When our foes have fangs
that are ready and mouths
that are drooling for blood,
to bite back is good.
Remember, they go for the throat
to silence and choke.
Make your mark.
Let resistance be shown
instead of unheard.
Leave a scar.
Leave an indelible word.
It’s a struggle for life.
You must fight if you can
for the young, for the weak
for the foster kids torn from their homes
for the hundreds in CECOT
for the land they would tear up
and stain.
Let them know
that protectors remain.
Jenne Kaivo saw this shit coming years ago. She lives in California.
Thursday, June 12, 2025
PILLOW FROM PALESTINE
Resting silently on our couch
a pillow we have had for a long time
off-white woven fabric, hand embroidery,
four rows of a repeating pattern, star flowers
mingled with hearts that touch and overlap
stitched only in my favorite color, turquoise
purchased from a friend of a friend visiting
from the Middle East, selling handwork
by women, women sewing designs
to help their families survive
and thrive under difficult
Today, I gaze at our pillow
soft and lovely in its simple artistry
noticing only harsh edges and rough reality
seeing famished faces, bloodshot vacant eyes,
people devoid of hope, hungry, and destitute
and the silence of our gentle keepsake mocks
the unrelenting screams of unheard cries
ignores the daily suffering of all in Gaza
cruelty fueled by the fervor of revenge
an excess of indifference, what more
can we do to end war, change
Wednesday, June 11, 2025
HOW TO SPOT A FASCIST
Or kick your door in on a freezing night.
Now fascists take control with Facebook ads
And Tik-Tok videos to make you laugh,
Let you believe that facts can just be changed,
Decide reality is just a trick.
Then suddenly your job has disappeared
Raw work-experience kids have wiped you out,
Universities are threatened, books are banned,
Medicaid blown apart and foreigners locked up,
Poor people die and old alliances break.
Fascists begin with elections
When you are not paying attention.
Helen Jones was born in Chester, U.K. She gained a degree in English, many years ago from University College London and later an M.Ed. from the University of Liverpool. She is now happily retired and spends a lot of her time writing and making a new garden. Her poetry has been published in several journals in the U.K., and she is currently working on a novel set in fifth century Deva.
LIGHTNING
by Jeremy Nathan Marks
Trying to make sense of lightning is about more
than science. How long should students lower
their heads, consult their books, run computer
simulations and not look outside.
By the time you read this message a bolt will
have struck in dozens of locations, though
you might not have registered the flash. The smell
of ozone in your nose, learning to count for thunder.
Did you know lightning can be silent. An owl.
Friction travels from cloud to cloud. It’s over my head
I’ve heard
told. There’s a space in the great codes for interpellations,
gnostic meanings, hidden from the rabble: debates about what’s
in plain view
Can someone without sight see a storm.
What if they also cannot hear.
Lightning can be a figment of the mind:
logos. But if we cannot make observations
what is science.
Every one of us has dreams. There were heat storms
over my crib. I couldn’t talk but in my gut I knew some
thing was wrong.
Let the infants cry. For the betterment of science.
Watch them, how they respond. From the blur comes
a woman’s features. Mother? But not the storm.
They cry because they know she’s an electric force,
violence with the texture of milk—
Jeremy Nathan Marks knows that his own instinct to try to enucleate the problem is a self-deception. But he's stubborn. He lives and writes (stubbornly) in Canada.
Tuesday, June 10, 2025
PAGES OF LIGHT (IN DARK TIMES)
(1)
Hard to tell
whether the wind
last night was social unrest
or coyotes’ dreams as darkness flowing.
The lightness of touch suggested
nature whispering
yet in the absence of a moon
and with so few stars
to give direction there were only the neighborhood palms
leaning on the moment
had taken solid form and claimed
the desert underneath
the city as its first
and only home.
(2)
Stone-bright the way ahead
runs true to course, rising by the step
to a view of all things possible
and some
forever out of reach. All those things
that never change come what may
are out there, stubborn and holding their ground
through traffic jams and newscasts,
analyses and polls, discussions
that take truth
away just as the sun
has stripped first the outer skin
of the saguaro lying
where it fell two summers back
dried its flesh revealing the core
connecting tip to root, the inner life
revealed in code, an alphabet
surviving after language ends.
(3)
The peaks and dips along the ridge
rest easily this morning
against clouds too closely packed
for news to pass
from worlds beyond our own.
Grey light, pigeon feathers
scattering from the rooftop cooling unit at house
four-three-four-seven
where a hawk endures a mockingbird’s attention
until he stretches out
Nothing exists outside
his range of vision, he’s the headline and the story
circling higher than opinion columns
reach. Doesn’t need words
to know what he knows. Leaves emptiness alone
because the entire sky
the area he’s taken for a home.
(4)
A bright and tranquil morning
on the way around the pond where red-
eared sliders and secrets
move just beneath the sky
that floats across the surface to the reeds
at the farthest edge.
and rumors from the air.
None are too fast for him,
neither the latest out of Hollywood
nor royalty’s ongoing
struggle to be important. What is true tastes no different
from what is not; he keeps dipping
and swerving
through politics, finance
and all the way down
to the feathers and bones left on the ground
still with a glaze of moonlight.
(5)
Arroyo walk, sidestepping the facts and
speculating whether
the boulder resting on the slope just past
where the trail dips came
to be exactly in position after
falling through space
Some facts are immoveable, too heavy
to be argued about. But someone’s always
naming parts, allocating
numbers, holding science
to the light and insisting explanations
matter more
than the experience
of stopping every time
to contemplate the mystery
that built the world before there was
a truth
to lie about, when
only the stars kept records.
(6)
Darkness left, light straight
ahead, the first sky of the day can’t decide
which mood to promise. The clouds
are carrying concealed, the sun’s
a lonely heart just waking up.
One day looks
much like another, give or take
the shadows and the low high
in the forecast, rain
this afternoon on a street
for all weathers where showers dance
on asphalt,
heat soaks in
and wishes for a better world
go barefoot, once around the cul-de-sac
and back, beyond the visible, beyond
reality, beyond what even
from his throne of wind.
David Chorlton lives in Phoenix with a view of a desert mountain and more interesting local bird life than many people expect in a city. The desert still teaches him about poetry in a way academies can never do.