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Submission Guidelines: Send 1-3 unpublished poems in the body of an email (NO ATTACHMENTS) to nvneditor[at]gmail.com.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.

Wednesday, February 04, 2026

LETTER FOM A BESEIGED CITY IN AMERICA

by Margaret Hasse




So alone, each of hundreds in our north
star state––beings sniffed out, run 
down, dragged, tied up, shoved 
in, head-cracked, driven, dumped 
in dark places, disappeared.

So alone, the rest of us snugged at home 
hearing news of atrocities, watching 
videos of masked men in our home-
town toting machine-like guns, grabbing, 
kicking, shooting, and we who knew
not or actually knew the taken, first feel 
unbelief, numbing fear, geysers of inward 
anger and sorrow for the numberless hurt 
and the named dead.

We became roused and risen to 
outward acts: deliver food, guard 
school children, record kidnappings with 
eyes and cameras as on the boy in 
a blue bunny hat, send money, join
groups, trail black cars, shriek alerts
with whistles, light vigil candles, wield signs, 
march, lay flowers on the bloody snow, say no.

A whole community besieged becomes 
a whole community of care, protest and 
resistance, a testing ground for whether 
kindness and the Constitution can hold up
against the battering ram of govern-
ment run amok as we gather in our cold time,
our beautiful city under attack, to hold 
hands with neighbors whether citizens or 
citizens-to-be while spokespeople for
the outrage name-call and hob-gobble truth.

We here know what we saw and see, 
and gradually then all at once, people 
across the country are paying attention, 
posting their support, writing the wrongs 
to their leaders while Springsteen 
sings his “Streets of Minneapolis,” a song 
like a flag to carry, and Judge Biery near
the southern border in the lone star state
frees from detention a man and his young 
son stolen from Minnesota, noting in 
his order that “the case has its genesis 
in the ill-conceived and incompetently-
implemented government pursuit
of daily deportation quotas... ”–– all 
just and sympathetic action from all
over the country eases our city’s 
isolation and bolsters hope 
our democracy will endure. 


Margaret Hasse is a poet living and working in the Twin Cities. She has published nine books of poetry, and has received many honors, such as a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts.