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Today's News . . . Today's Poem
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Submission Guidelines: Send 1-3 unpublished poems in the body of an email (NO ATTACHMENTS) to nvneditor[at]gmail.com.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.
Saturday, February 14, 2026
WE CAN DO VERY LITTLE, BUT I WILL DO THIS
A VALENTINE FOR MINNEAPOLIS
Lisa Shulman is a poet, children’s book author, and teacher. Her poetry has appeared in Sheila-na-gig, About Place, Anacapa Review, Inkfish, Kitchen Table Quarterly, New Verse News, and elsewhere. Her new chapbook is Fragile Bones, Fierce Heart. A Pushcart nominee, Lisa teaches poetry with California Poets in the Schools, and workshops for women in recovery.
Friday, February 13, 2026
EQUITY AND TOLERANCE
FOR STONEWALL
it no longer belongs here.
Turn its rainbow black—
disavow the pride it gave
commemorating AIDS victims,
lives lost as in a war.
and it was a war, unended, unwon.
Pull the emblem of suffering
of men, women and children,
renew the prejudice that killed
Oscar*, Alan** and others,
deliver it with its own symbol
of derision and weakness.
It wasn’t Ellen D***. that convinced us,
Matt Shepard’s death didn’t convince us:
something fundamentally changed then.
Now bathroom jokes, lewdness, shame,
insinuation, guilt and closeting
all shift to the front burner.
Bury the flag of concern for people
deep in the heart of the heart of this country.
See us now, re-emerging, colors blazing,
in freedom’s garb,
to shake off erasure,
proclaiming our unity:
Our city, our flag.
*Oscar Wilde
** Alan Turing
*** Ellen Degeneres
Roberta Batorsky, a New Jersey poet, has published this month her first book of poetry, Perihelion.
TRUMP MAKES ME WISH
that superheroes were real. What if
Superman was on his way
to the White House from
the Fortress of Solitude,
or maybe
flying in from Metropolis after putting
in a long day at the Daily Planet.
Or perhaps,
he has already captured the President
using the Phantom Zone Projector,
committing him to this spectral prison along with
super-criminal, Lex Luthor.
Unlike other supervillains, Lex Luthor
does not possess superpowers. His evil stems
from his vast wealth and influence
over politics, science, and technology.
An ordinary human, but vengeful and driven by
an insatiable need for control, utterly devoid of ethics
—an unprincipled man.
I’m sure that Donald and Lex would find much to talk about
in this never-ending battle for truth, justice, and the American way.
listen carefully
and you can hear the fabric
of the flag ripping
Kevin Boyce is a poet,
photographer, children’s book author, and lifelong resident of New England. He
volunteers in his hometown, leading a community-sponsored contest and
publication for emerging authors.
FROM THE FIELDS OF MINNESOTA
by Mike Bayles
Each winter fields rested
and in spring they found
new life. My uncle raised
cattle and crops with pride.
News played on television
during simpler times
while families sat together
and talked at the dinner table.
We had our dreams
of going to the moon
and in quiet times
we looked into clear skies.
Buildings in downtown
Minneapolis glistened
our pride, a mecca for most
while in St. Paul
cattle displayed at the State Fair
won ribbons while young boys
learned to farm.
My cousin and I walked
through pastures and we said
our uncles would never die.
We talked of wars,
as soldiers fought
on the other side of the world.
Little did we know that they
would be fought on our streets
Back then a man dressed in a cape
could leap over the tallest building
with a single bound. I long
to hold onto that dream.
The farm where my cousin once lived
was torn up for a highway
and we’ve fallen out of touch.
Our fathers have died.
Now I cry for them
and innocence lost
when the news says
we are killing each other
on the streets I once loved.
Mike Bayles, a lifelong Midwest resident, is the author of seven books of poetry and fiction. His most recent book is The Siouxland and Other Dreams, with poems about Northwest and surrounding areas, and mythology of the land. His writing is informed by his travels when he worked as a flagger/traffic control for construction and utility crews. He is expecting to publish his next collection of poetry this spring.
Thursday, February 12, 2026
IN THE PRESENCE OF PEACE
by Ron Shapiro
Ron Shapiro, an award-winning teacher, has published over 20 poems in publications including Nova Bards 24 & 25, Virginia Writers Project, The New Verse News, Poetry X Hunger, Minute Musings, Backchannels, Gezer Kibbutz Gallery, All Your Poems, Paper Cranes Literary Magazine, Zest of the Lemon and two chapbooks: Sacred Spaces, Wonderings and Understory, a collection of nature poetry.
BRANKS
Images of Epstein victims as depicted in Feb. 8, 2026, Super Bowl ad. Image of branks from an oil painting by John Willie, pseudonym for John Alexander Scott Coutts, for Bizarre, a sadomasochism magazine published 1946–1959. Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons. |
You have to tell the truth, but tell it slant.
To lay it bare’s unbearable. You’ve tried.
You’d like to leave it buried, but you can’t.
Too few have cared to hear a woman rant
since Homer (“Sing, O Muse, of anger”) died.
You have to tell the truth; but tell it slant,
since, frankly, even Keats would have to grant
this truth’s no beauty. This, you’ve had to hide.
You’d like to leave it buried. But you can’t,
so Dickinson’s advice is relevant.
She’ll be your Virgil, your inferno-guide.
You have to “Tell [...] the truth, but tell it slant— ”
“Tell all the truth.” But don’t get adamant,
“Or every man be blind—,” she qualified.
You’d like to leave it bare. (Read: But you can’t.)
Loud girls get label-gagged: once, Termagant,
Virago, Shrew; now, Bitch. Take that in stride.
(You have, to tell the truth.) But tell it—slantor no—you must. Omit the bitter. Scant
the pathos. Cut the caustic. Snip the snide.
(You’d like to leave it, buried.) But you can’t
accuse the rich of rape, or lawyers chant,
“No, he’s the victim! She’s a slut who lied.”
You have to tell the truth, but tell it slant.You’d like to leave it buried. But you can’t.
A BLOT UPON THEE
Where Blame falls dark, and we are left perplexed.
The blurred distinction between right and wrong—
The weak are blistered by the brazen strong.
The blundered records, bleached of wealthy name
Won't bear the Guilt, now blotted free from shame,
While those who bled a trail of broken trust
Are bluntly bared, the others cloaked with dust.
What blatant gall to hide the rich man's Sin,
To shield in blacked-out lines the wolves within,
Now battered, those who bear no Stain at all—
What Blight is bred in this corrupted hall?
There is no Justice, just the shattered teen,
Her blank Betrayal b-l-i-n-k-i-n-g on our screen.
Wednesday, February 11, 2026
FOR THE WATCHERS
A WHISTLE AND A HONK FOR OUR CITIES UNDER SIEGE
Exploding eyeballs of children in chokeholds. Shivering
seniors drug out into teen temperatures in their underwear;
bloody faces of body-slammed elders, face prints in snow.
Packs of 250lb. fantasy football bettors/NFL-wannabes pile on.
Invasion of the body snatchers! Deputized traitors / MAGAt
magicians disappearing loved ones. Boss Tweet’s bounty hunters—
$50,000 bonuses — body-slamming, beating down, choking and
Redacting 1st , 4th, 14th and other amendments—on our dime!
Home doors busted open like piñatas by battering ram-wielding
thugs. Shards of car window glass shower city streets with freezing
chaos and terror.
Another US city’s under siege. Will the reign of ICE stall in snow?
Burrito shop hungry hardhats flooded for lunch;
for strategy sessions; for 30 minute escapes into
sports sections folded up in sturdy denim back
pockets: EMPTY.
Coffee shop where co-workers; old and new
neighbors and welcome visitors gathered to chat
over cappuccino, chai, mocha, Americano; or sat
journaling or answering messages: EMPTY.
Corner church swollen with Sunday harmonies
with communion; with fellowship: EMPTY.
Neighborhood school’s steady stream of shrieking drop-offs
and pickups ground to sudden halt.
Clinic’s steady stream of cold and flu sufferers: are missing
in action. Community life is strangled under brownshirt siege.
Recalling “No Kings” rally ‘eons ago.’ Signs reading: NO WAR BUT
CLASS WAR! Recalling contagious rage against grifting Judas. And
feeling hopeful as hell. Remembering solidarity’s our silver lining
in swastika infused clouds … almost filling battleship gray skies...
Raymond Nat Turner is a NYC poet; Black Agenda Report's Poet-in-Residence; and founder/co-leader of the jazz-poetry ensemble UpSurge!NYC.
Tuesday, February 10, 2026
DANCING WITH MR. BUNNY
Alan Walowitz is a Contributing Editor at Verse-Virtual, an Online Community Journal of Poetry. His chapbook Exactly Like Love comes from Osedax Press. The Story of the Milkman and Other Poems is available from Truth Serum Press. From Arroyo Seco Press, In the Muddle of the Night, written with poet Betsy Mars. The chapbook The Poems of the Air is from Red Wolf Editions and is free for downloading.
WHISTLE CHOIR
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| Bde Maka Ska, January 31, 2026 |
