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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Submission Guidelines: Send 1-3 unpublished poems in the body of an email (NO ATTACHMENTS) to nvneditor[at]gmail.com.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.
Wednesday, May 27, 2026
LETHAL INJECTION PROTOCOL
Tuesday, May 26, 2026
ON THE MORNING THE CITY CHANGED ITS WALK
shop gates came down early.
Foreign-owned stores locked their doors
The taxi driver changed his route again,
No one calls it fear,
Somewhere, a shopkeeper counts what might be lost
And between them,
A child watches from a doorway
No one says the same story.
Later, when the streets grow quiet again,
how do we live here together
Khayelihle Benghu is a South African writer and an author of The Names We Carry. She explores the themes of resilience grieve, silence and love in every day setting.
Monday, May 25, 2026
LULLABY, UPDATED
Hush, little birdie, don’t be alarmed,
We are gonna keep all your chicks unharmed—
And even if they’re slow to fledge,
That is still no reason to feel on edge,
For though some migrants (human ones)
Have to leave their nests thanks to men with guns,
Robins are protected by our word.
Aren’t you glad you were born a bird?
Melissa Balmain edits Light, North America's longest-running journal of comic verse. Her poems and/or prose have appeared in Crab Orchard Review, Ecotone, The Hopkins Review, Literary Matters, McSweeney’s, The New Yorker, The New York Times, Nimrod, Poetry Daily, and Rattle. Her latest book of poetry is Satan Talks to His Therapist (Paul Dry Books).
PLACING SEASHELLS ON GRAVES, BY PHOTOS
| The poet by the beach at Les Braves Monument, Saint-Laurent-sur-Mer |
Living far now, from where
the veterans among my
beloved dead are interred,
I will place by my
father’s photo
a seashell, one that is also
a veteran of sorts, a shell
from Omaha Beach, Normandy.
Walking with our guide
where our soldiers landed,
my fingers, on that cool
May morning plucked,
two slim jack-knife clam shells,
from the wet sands before the
tide could steal them back.
That same guide had recounted how
sand of this place
still carried traces
of the landing party’s blood.
That same day, we were given roses
to lay on graves in the American cemetery.
I also laid down one of these shells,
with a few grains of sand still
clinging to its curves like
hands clasping a lifeboat
thinking that perhaps
the grains carried
DNA from a comrade of the
unknown man I visited.
The other of this precious pair
found its way home with me.
I did not wash it or place it in a
generic box: “Shell, France.”
Instead, I kept it aside, wrapped.
Each Memorial Day, I carefully place
that small remaining
Omaha Beach shell
with its few grains of sand
by my father’s picture.
Although he was on
Pacific Coast sands beating
back assaults from a different
Axis Power foe, he and the
Omaha Beach men
were also comrades.
I imagine the soul or souls
on the sand in my shell
communicating with my father,
trading tales of their fight for justice.
On Memorial Day, especially,
I think of them and
all who sacrificed their
lives for our country as does
everyone who loves
and remembers those soldiers,
everyone who loves freedom.
Sunday, May 24, 2026
A LATE NIGHT FAREWELL
This did not have to happen.
It was not an accident, but
a lie about costs and audience
diminishing in the age
of the soon-to-be-built
triumphal arch, but
then we would not
have heard McCartney
backed up by Colbert
and Costello, other
musicians and friends
singing Hello Goodbye,
sixty two years after
the Beatles played
on the same stage,
would not have felt
the audience
on stage, on television,
wherever the signal
traveled, saying
hello goodbye
at the same time.
That my friends
is the DNA
of experience,
the grandeur
containing multitudes,
the contrarie states
of the human soul
and everything
and every person
from whom I have
learnt to get up
despite the sadness,
to break bread
and link arms,
despite the sadness,
to sing in the wee dark
and to disturb
the demons and go on
stronger together
into the new day rising.
Indran Amirthanayagam writes a Substack. He has just published Isla itinerante ( Editorial Apogeo, Peru, 2025) and White Space Sonnets ( Sarasavi publishers, Sri Lanka, 2025). His other publications include El bosque de deleites fratricidas ( RIL Editores), Seer (Hanging Loose Press),The Runner's Almanac (Spuyten Duyvil), Powèt Nan Pò A: Poet of the Port (Mad Hat), and Ten Thousand Steps Against the Tyrant (Broadstone Books). He is the translator of Kenia Cano’s Animal For The Eyes (Dialogos Books) and Origami: Selected Poems of Manuel Ulacia (Dialogos Books). He edits The Beltway Poetry Quarterly, hosts the Poetry Channel on YouTube, and publishes poetry books with Sara Cahill Marron at Beltway Editions.
PROFIT AND LOSS STATEMENT FOR MR. B.
by Steven Ratiner
“The Post needs to be a profitable enterprise that stands on its own two feet. Let me tell you why. Because it’s a measure of its relevance. If people won’t pay for our product, it’s not a good enough product. It would be like poetry without rhyming, it’s too easy.” ––Jeff Bezos in an interview on CNBC reported by The New York Times, May 20, 2026
Steven Ratiner is the author of Grief's Apostrophe, published by Beltway Editions in 2025. He's also published three poetry chapbooks, a collection of poetry interviews, and appeared in several anthologies. His work has appeared in scores of journals in America and abroad, including Parnassus, Agni, Hanging Loose, Poet Lore, Salamander, Vox Populi, QRLS (Singapore), and Poetry Australia––and been translated into Mandarin, Spanish, Ukrainian, and Hebrew. He's also written poetry criticism for The Washington Post, The Christian Science Monitor, The San Francisco Chronicle, and other journals. Giving Their Word—Conversations with Contemporary Poets was reissued in a paperback edition (University of Massachusetts Press). He is Poet Laureate Emeritus for Arlington, Massachusetts, and was elected in 2024 as President of the New England Poetry Club, one of the oldest literary associations in America. Now, beginning its seventh year, his weekly Red Letter Poems features a diverse range of poets, from up-and-coming talents to some of the most important voices in contemporary poetry.
SHADES OF AI AND ALTRUISM
| Technology Instagram |
A California jury has tossed out Elon Musk's high-profile lawsuit against OpenAI and its boss Sam Altman. In a unanimous verdict, the jury agreed that Musk had waited too long to file his lawsuit, leaving all of his claims essentially expired. —BBC, May 19, 2026
The peerless archer stands in shaded wood
in Lincoln green beneath a feather cap.
We gather for a modern Robin Hood
who waits with patience for the gold to stack.
Full pockets split the seams of charity,
while our children’s pictures feed the machine.
Funded by his own foolishness. Pity.
Olive tights were traded for minted green.
Can three billionaires fit in one courtroom?
The ballad threads were never camouflage.
When all wear custom suits we can’t assume
which man is sheriff and which is outlaw.
Sherwood is lost in a shade of envy,
one model fits both men and company.
Ashley Nicole Nootnagel lives in Virginia and has a B.S. in Criminal Justice & Sociology from Old Dominion University. She works in human resources and is raising a daughter and two Australian Shepherds.
Friday, May 22, 2026
AND YOU, WHAT DO YOU NEED?
because it gives us light,
whether blazing, or watery,
or obscured by clouds,
and the words to share it with you.
These days I need the moon,
because it’s a reflection of light,
whether new & invisible, or waxing,
or waning, or full,
and the words to share it with you.
These days I need all the flowers,
because they each provide food
for some creature and our hearts,
whether tiny prickly flowers of tumbleweed
or galaxies of sunflowers,
and the words to share them with you.
These days I need all the world’s creatures
because if they disappear none of us will ever
be the same, whether the tiger that padded past
our jeep in India without a glance, or the black widow
spider spinning a web by our back door,
and the words to share them with you.
These days I need all the recipes I can collect
because they feed us, whether my ancestors’
pfeffernuessen and kringel, sauerkraut and pickled eggs
or my adopted state’s tamales, posole and biscochitos,
and the words to share them with you.
These days I need all the stories of standing up to say NO!
because they show us the way
and the price we must be willing to pay,
whether Dad’s stories of being
a conscientious objector in WWII
or people today carrying signs that say “No Kings,”
and the words to share them with you.
These days I need all of your hearts,
whether bruised and broken,
or fibrillating, or full of joy,
to hold them up to the light with words,
because they are
the heartBEAT heartBEAT
of the real America.
Thursday, May 21, 2026
MYTHOS AT COMMENCEMENT
Eric Schmidt stood at the stage
like someone introducing age.
He praised A.I.’s unfolding reign.
The graduates booed him just the same.
“You are the future,” Schmidt proclaimed.
The students looked professionally ashamed.
“Machines will free you for new dreams!”
A voice cried out, “They killed internships.”
The billionaires call this “transition,”
their favorite synonym for incision.
At Citadel, whole teams were gone:
outperformed between dusk and dawn.
At Stanford now the freshmen pray
their essays still sound human-made.
The honor code grows frail and thin
when every prompt begins with Begin.
The parents clap. The provost beams.
The deans keep monetizing dreams.
Meanwhile Mythos scans the wire
like scripture crossed with hellfire.
It reads the grid for sport alone,
finds ancient flaws in backbone stone;
then Anthropic, careful, grave,
explains restriction keeps us safe.
Translation: banks and states may peek
while everyone refreshes LinkedIn weekly.
The students boo because they know
the future doesn’t need payroll.
And somewhere in refrigerated light
the servers bloom all through the night,
teaching silicon to replace
the species that designed its face.
Wednesday, May 20, 2026
DETROIT DISPATCH
JANUARY 6 SLUSH FUND LIMERICKS
| Cartoon by Clay Jones |
DOJ official told GOP ally that big payouts were coming for Jan. 6 defendants: Months before the $1.8 billion “anti-weaponization” fund was announced, Ed Martin predicted Capitol rioters would get millions, even if it took until 2028, two people told NBC News. May 20, 2026
They climbed up to Capitol Hill,
Mike Pence they were going to kill;
and now, for their crime,
’gainst reason or rhyme,
their pockets they’re hoping to fill.
The criminals of January six,
are getting a monetary fix.
Yet women abused
and sorely misused
by Epstein and friends still get nix.
Paul A. Freeman is the author of The Movement, a dystopia-Americana novel set in a future United States of America. The book is available from Amazon as an ebook download and as a paperback. His first book, Rumours of Ophir, a crime novel taught at ‘O’ level in Zimbabwean high schools, was also translated into German. In addition to having two novels, a children’s book and an 18,000-word narrative poem (Robin Hood and Friar Tuck: Zombie Killers!) commercially published, Paul Freeman is the author of numerous published short stories, poems, plays and articles.
Tuesday, May 19, 2026
NEVER LOOK A GRIFT HORSE IN THE MOUTH
Nigel Farage has provided a new explanation for why he accepted a £5m gift from a Reform UK donor in the weeks before he announced he would stand in the last general election. In an interview on Thursday, Farage said the money was a “reward” for campaigning for Brexit. Previously, he had said the gift was given for security purposes, to keep him “safe and secure” for the rest of his life. —The Guardian, May 14, 2026
Concerning gifts,
The story shifts:
Security?
A Brexit fee?
Such camouflage
Befits Farage,
Who claimed, when caught,
I can't be bought.
With this much dosh,
His brag is bosh.
It's not a bribe?
Sure has that vibe!
Steven Kent is the poetic alter ego of writer and musician Kent Burnside. His work appears in 251, Asses of Parnassus, The Dirigible Balloon, Light, Lighten Up Online, The Lyric, New Verse News, The Orchards Poetry Journal, Philosophy Now, The Pierian, Pulsebeat Poetry Journal, The Road Not Taken: A Journal of Formal Poetry, Snakeskin, and Well Read. His collections I Tried (And Other Poems, Too) (2023) and Home at Last (2025) are published by Kelsay Books.
CANVASSING
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AI-generated graphic by NightCafé for The New Verse News. |
If a man’s home is his castle,
he reluctantly lowered his drawbridge. “Is she
a Democrat or Republican?” he asked us.
Manicured lawns, foot-high grass.
Porches with fishing rods, feral cats.
“She had three litters before she was fixed.”
A woman on oxygen. A man with a cane.
A woman using a walker
who agreed to put up a yard sign.
“I always vote Republican.”
“I vote straight Democrat.”
“I’m not registered.”
We were offered water, beer;
given thanks, directions, advice,
even hand-wipes. We learned
of dogs who’d been rescued, the price
of a condemned house. One woman’s grandson
is studying classic literature in Italy.
As for the king of his castle, he said,
nay, shouted, “Get off my land!” which,
as far as he was concerned,
wasn’t made for some of you and me.
Mark Williams's poems have appeared in The New Verse News, Poets Reading the News, Writers Resist, as well as The Southern Review, ONE ART: a literary journal, New Ohio Review, and elsewhere. He is the author of the collections, Carrying On and Life. He and his wife, DeeGee, live and canvas in Evansville, Indiana.



