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He belongs in a cheap horror thriller;
Some call him a bum
Or the worst of the scum,
But to me he's just Stephen Miller.
Today's News . . . Today's Poem
The New Verse News
presents politically progressive poetry on current events and topical issues.
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| A government handout photograph showed weapon remnants displayed on a table near the ruins of the Shajarah Tayyebeh elementary school, where a precision strike reportedly killed 175 people, mostly children, on Feb. 28. The remnants have been identified by The Times as components of a modern, U.S.-made Tomahawk missile. Credit...IRIB, via Telegram |
It was not the Israelis, after all,
who triple tapped the school in Minab.
It was US, according to the Times—
our bombs
that blasted babies into doll parts,
scattered them among the concrete-
silica dust of their classrooms.
But it was always our bombs, really–
Arab Salim and Jabalia, Biden’s
red line to Rafah. Bombs with
our names on them. Cruz and
Haley chickenhawked in Sharpie,
mine and yours scratched san-serif
onto the shells in bolder relief with
each paycheck deposited.
I read the article about Minab
during my planning period, and
it lingers with me now around
this crater-quiet classroom.
The kids are taking a test, but I
don’t care whether they pass it.
I just want to talk to them.
I just want to believe that it's
not too late to talk, that it’s
not too late to believe.
Something about the way the
big vent grumbles when
the air kicks on reminds me:
the surprise lockdown drill
has to be this week or next.
They’re quiet, like now,
the drills at least.
The kids are used to them.
Winder and Uvalde, Gaza and Minab.
Maybe bullets stop when bombs do.
I remember now why that vent rattles—
I took out most the screws that hold
it to the wall, and a few more outside.
The maintenance guy showed me how
to kick and climb our way out there
in case we ever need to flee, to run
outside, unafraid as we are of a
brush smoke sky.
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| ID 67399384 © Olga Kuevda | Dreamstime.com |
by Indran Amirthanayagam
Does the Sun rise
for me? Or if not
for me, does it rise
for my brother,
for my sister?
What about
the sun rising
over Tehran
or Gaza,
London,
or Doha?.
Does the sun
rise for me?
Who is
my brother?
Who is
my sister,
the mother
wailing beside
the rubble
of the school,
her girls
bombed
to bits?
Does the Sun
rise anyway
over killing fields?
Does it rise
over our bodies
thrashing
in the dark?
Does it rise
exposing
the open
grave?
Does it rise
helping plants
to bloom?
Does it rise
whether
we live
or die?
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.
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AI-generated graphic by NightCafé for The New Verse News. |
At high tide the king comes to the shore
and stands upon the sands at water’s edge
He commands the sea to leave his kingdom
as followers break into loud applause
TRiUMPhantly he gloats as it recedes
But alas he tarries far too long
The tide has ebbed and soon relentlessly
the waters now make their advance
and still the king refuses to retreat
unheeding warnings from his own soothsayers
He does not, cannot, won’t acknowledge
the inherent truth that laps now at his feet
All shall soon be swept away
by the waters of the rising tide
just like the foolish pharaoh and his legions
in pursuit of Moses and his people
who when the waters parted chose to follow
only to be drowned in the Red Sea
Gordon Gilbert is a New York City west villager. In these trying times, he finds some solace taking long walks along the Hudson River. He keeps hoping things will turn around, waiting on that elusive inflection point, but it keeps receding. Maybe next time…
Still waiting.
by Judith Skillman
Herr Drumpf fastened by the feet
to a wooden panel, drawn behind a horse
as illustrated in Matthew Paris’s Chronica Majora,
hanged almost to the point
of death. Watch as Drumpf’s emasculated,
disemboweled, beheaded, quartered.
See his remains on display (as depicted in the execution
of Hugh Dispenser the Younger),
where a crowd of brightly dressed 13th century men
gather to view a ladder. A fire
blazes on the ground,
logs crisscrossed like bound limbs.
Another ladder holds green capped executioner
with his short sharp knife. I watch
Mr. President’s flesh gape, pulled apart
at collarbone and genitalia.
At the base of these Elizabethan ladders
placed in perspective by the painter, Froissart of Louise of Gruthuse,
a group of top-hatted gentlemen gesture.
Bulldozers sit where the ballroom
would have been, heaps of dirt piled. A group of giant moles
unearthed the newest labyrinth a la Hamas.
And here we are, dressed to the nines,
wearing ballet-like slippers,
talking in low tones, holding not iPhones but harmonicas.
Let this be an example
for any would be high treasonist’s,
as well as Matthew Lambert,
the Irishman who suffered this punishment
as little ago as 1581.
If he’d been a woman
he’d have been burned at the stake
for reasons of public decency.
Judith Skillman is the author of twenty collections of poetry. Her work has appeared in Commonweal, Threepenny Review, The Southern Review, Zyzzyva, and numerous other literary journals. She has received funding from The Academy of American Poets and Artist Trust, among other organizations. Her new book is Oppression, Shanti Arts, 2026.
Two sirens before 8 AM woke Ibtisam, a Palestinian,
and her Jewish neighbor Melila. They’ve lived
in the same Jerusalem building for decades.
In their pajamas, sleepless after the loud attack
the night before, they decided they’d clean
the building together, as something positive they
could do. And when they finished
removing spider webs and dust, they celebrated
the new cleanliness with mint tea
and homemade butter cookies.
Esther Cohen’s new book is All of Us.