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Submission Guidelines: Send 1-3 unpublished poems in the body of an email (NO ATTACHMENTS) to nvneditor[at]gmail.com.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.
of America, my country, it no longer holds together inside its borders. Four decades ago, every school day, I asked one of the twelve-year-olds in my charge to lead us in the Pledge of Allegiance. It was the law, this recital. As good a way as any, I thought, to begin. Words, words, slippery as jello cubes, hardly join, now, to anything real. My heart beats, my hand firms itself to my chest—this friction, this viva— but my tongue dare not lift, my lips not open, my body not burst with air, with light. America, where have you gone?
You are in Minneapolis, America, handing out scarves and hats, standing beside your neighbors, lifting whistles to your lips because your lips have power, your breath has power, you are teaching us how to be Americans.
Athena Kildegaard is the author of six books of poetry, most recently Prairie Midden (Tinderbox Editions), winner of the WILLA Literary Award.
Scott Lowery is a poet, songwriter, and teaching artist, who currently lives with his wife and cats in Milwaukee near their young grandkids. More than ever, he is proud to have grown up in Minneapolis. His poems have appeared in Prairie Schooner, Great River Review, River Styx, North American Review, Canary, and elsewhere, including several anthologies, ekphrastic shows, and podcasts. Lowery’s award-winning second chapbook, Mutual Life, observes small-town life against a looming backdrop of pandemic, climate change, and extremism. Find more, including work with young authors, at www.scottlowery.org.
or even this universe (there may not be any other).
This city is Granada. Inside my house
I think only of Minneapolis, of winter.
Outside my house I dream of Grenada and spring
on the slope leading towards the white limestone caves
where the pink dusk hovers over the Alhambra and the Sierra Nevada.
By day I once walked through the summer palace of the kings of Spain.
By night I listened to flamenco and the percussive shoes of dancers.
By day the stained glass of the cathedral blossomed
like the roses in the summer palace. Beauty softened the blow
of the inquisition six hundred years before
just as a memory of joy softens the blow of the shootings,
and the military on the streets of Minneapolis. Nothing
is more consoling than the dream of a beautiful ruin,
for the ugliness happening to America. I lay memory
like a wreath on the roadside
where Alex Pretti and Renee Good died.
Katherine Smith’s poetry publications include appearances in Southern Review, Boulevard, North American Review, Ploughshares, Mezzo Cammin, Cincinnati Review, Missouri Review, and many other journals. Her first book Argument by Design (Washington Writers’ Publishing House) appeared in 2003. Her second book of poems Woman Alone on the Mountain (Iris Press), appeared in 2014. Her third book, Secret City, appeared with Madville Press in 2022. She works at Montgomery College in Maryland.
. . .and I’ve wandered into a dream world I no longer recognize, teeming with shapes, twisted gone out of bounds dangerous, like a cell phone mistaken for a gun.
So many ways to get it wrong, to step where a trap is set.
Too much for this little guy who sees a featureless white shape, which seems to be slumbering, like Fox, who is warm around his neck, but where is the thing’s head where is the mouth where the teeth?
Too much for this little guy who knows not yet the art of hiding.
Too much for me and for you too, even as we stand here learning the shape of fear, trying not to turn away.
Susan Cornelis is an Olympia, WA mixed media artist, workshop teacher and art blogger. Her ekphrastic poetry is an exploration of the emotional content of her paintings. She refers to these as Conversations with the Muse, which are regularly posted on her blog by that name at http://susancornelis.wordpress.com/