Monday, April 30, 2018

April Showers

Scant warmth has come to us in Pennsylvania as April ends, so we hope that curling up with some good reading will help stave off the endless winter in the air.  And remember, as the temperature does rise in May, going outside with a notebook forges an excellent path to some inspired writing.  This month's post features four poems written by Sevenatenine editors. 


Silent

The world 
Was completely silent 
Since the day that I was born. 
I always wondered 
What it felt like 
To have words spill 
Forward from my lips as if popcorn, 
Buttery and tangible, 
Reaching forward and telling everyone, 
Informing, educating, humoring, 
To know that was the cause 
Of that bright, endless smile 
That would appear on someone's face. 

Words have always 
Been my sanctuary 
Since I realized 
I could not utter a single word 
Floated around on clouds 
Long enough for me to touch them, 
To feel and grasp them, 
But also evaporating and falling 
In droplets of tears, not rain 
Trickling down my cheeks. 

I could never hear music 
Since the day that I was born. 
Never to hear those precious notes, 
Dancing, whispering, calling my name 
As it twirled in circles, 
Never to tell an octave or rest,  
The low, steady thrum of the bass 
High, whistling notes of a flute, 
Dancing, tiptoeing oboe, 
Or placid, rhythmic dums 
Keeping everything together 

But in music, 
There is always a wrong note played somewhere, 
Somewhere in the music, 
Something most people can't hear, 
And that wrong note 
Is me.

by Sarah Z., Grade 9


Artwork by Carolena B., Grade 9



Light

I see a light flicker,
and flutter nearby,
Its golden hues cascading across the sky.

A gentle hum, a vibration illuminating like that of a star.

I step- quickly
wanting to, so badly, catch the light 
to feel its power
shake my hands and warm my fingers
I jump- ready
hands open, then clasped like praying...


I have the light!
I feel the light,
I feel the power,
I see my hands shake


And then my finger burns
because the warmth is now fire.
It pierces 
and I cry out,
releasing my hands 
sucking my finger,
watching the bumblebee fall at my feet.


It wasn't light after all. 

by Sofia P., Grade 9 



Artwork by Lauren G., Grade 9



Long Way 

It's a long way 
To the shallow grave 
That will return her grandfather to the Earth 

It's a long way, so 
You offer her your shoes—she's getting blisters 
She decides to walk barefoot instead.  
You do, too 

It's a long way 
Back to a feeling of normality 
It's been years since you have spoken 
Words other than a garbled "happy birthday" 
Over the phone 

You stand at the back,  
Watch tears roll down her face 
As she says the last goodbyes 
To a person she loves 

That night,  
Your only goal is to make her smile 
Guarantee that nothing you ever do  
Will cause these tears 

You do make her cry,  
But they are tears of laughter, joy, 
As jokes are shared,  
And the invisible gap between you begins to close 

It's a long way to friendship 
But in a place where so many journeys ended,  
Your journey with her 
began.

by Trinity F., Grade 9

Artwork by Kylie A., Grade 9


Books

Nobody said 
To wait and see, 
To stop and look and think, 
To slide your bookmark 
Where stories are 
Made of merely ink. 
  
To ponder what 
And where and when 
The story tries to show, 
To discover a 
Different meaning that 
Before, you didn’t know. 
  
Nobody said 
To step a step, 
To live another’s quest, 
To think inside 
Another’s head, 
To be the story’s guest. 

To hide inside 
A nook or cranny, 
To cover up your head 
With a blanket 
And a flashlight, 
Cuddled up in bed. 

Nobody said 
To wait and see, 
To stop and look and think, 
To slide your bookmark 
Where stories are 
Made of merely ink. 

by Rebeca S., Grade 9



Thursday, March 29, 2018

March Out of Winter

Well, winter has taken its toll on literary magazine meetings, but we have soldiered through this last blast of winter to bring you a meaningful post.  We are looking forward to springing into action for April and avoiding bad seasonal puns.  

Artwork by Kaylie S., Grade 9

Alone

Just because I am alone, it does not make me lonely. 
Too many people overwhelm me. 

Thought don't flow into my mindless small talk, 
can't talk, so just stop. 

I need Alone.

Those interactions block my brain, which gives me lockjaw.

In my head I feel safest, a king upon his throne. 

I love Alone.


I hate Alone.

I can't handle Alone by myself. 

When I'm alone, the voices are the only ones around. 

Around me there is nothing because there is no one except for myselves.

Only the worst is inbound.

When I am alone, supports collapse and darkness weights down my brain, and
It reigns. 

I hate Alone. 

by Benjamin Z., Grade 8



Artwork by Alexa H., Grade 9

Tuesday, February 27, 2018

A February Feast For the Eyes and the Mind

Welcome back to the February edition of Sevenatenine! Our ninth graders have been working hard on demonstrating how research can be beautiful in their infographics. These infographics demonstrate how easy it is to incorporate research, design, and your interests all into one. Sit back with some hot chocolate and take a look at this month's chosen pieces.




by Alexa H., Grade 9


by Gabrielle S., Grade 9



by Jason P., Grade 9



by Lily D., Grade 9


Friday, January 19, 2018

A Most Promising Year

Welcome back to the January edition of Sevenatenine. The new year is starting off strong with a combination of amazing drawings and poems. 2018 is a most promising year based on the talent the school is already showing. Grab a blanket, cozy up by the fire, and enjoy this month's pieces.



Self-Discovery

Seven...
Seven hours,
 Seven classes,
Showing my true colors.
No fear of eight or nine,
No reason to change who I am.
Just happily seven.

Eight...
Goodbye seven, this is the real world.
Real drama,
Real struggles,
Real experiences.
Do I compromise who I am?
But then again,
 Who do people think I am?

Nine...
Goodbye eight, this is competition.
Who has more friends?
More popular friends?
Eyes all around,
Staring.
Judging.

Ten...
Goodbye nine, this is a new start.
At the bottom again,
Practically invisible to eleven and twelve.
But why does it matter?
A new chance to start over,
Be myself,
Accept that I'm my own person.
Not changing for eleven,
Not for twelve.
But will they judge me?


by Ella D., Grade 9


Artwork by Polina G., Grade 9


Potato Chip



When It's late in the school year,
And during an assembly,
Elementary students get bored
And hungry

I was definitely hungry
When I saw the potato chip,
On the auditorium floor,
Which was also our gym

I asked myself three questions:
Should I take it?
How long has it been there?
Do I care?

It had probably been there for a while,
No "three-second rule" could save it
But that hadn't changed
How it would taste

I guess I didn’t care,
At least not enough
Because when nobody was looking,
The chip vanished

I doubt I would do that now,
And you should too
But oh well,

It was a tasty snack

by Michael R., Grade 9



Artwork by Sabrina E., Grade 9


the apology

"i'm sorry." she mutters
it's a small, uttered apology with no rhyme or reason

i continue walking
"it's fine," the response floats up into the air and sits there for a while before it's gone
no one had even noticed the words above

it takes me a few seconds more to realize, as i look back at the faint outline
hair flying past others as she scrambles out the door
hands holding books too many for her grasp

i'm almost miles away from her
when I murmur the words


"sorry for what?"


by Alison Z., Grade 9



Artwork by Rachel C., Grade 9

I stumble through the darkness with glass stuck in my skin
I look up to the sky and everything caves in 
His B.M.W. set to flames 
Thinking what might be his name? 
I stumble through the darkness 
I know everything will change 
I see sirens in the distance 
I hear them loud and clear 
Relieved to see a medic 
But it's the police that I fear 
I stumble through the darkness, bloody head to toe
They treat me as a victim-- there's much that they don't know 


by Aiden D., Grade 9

Wednesday, December 20, 2017

Tracks In the Snow


Well, we are all still waiting for the first serious snowfall of the year, but maybe January will bring us a little more of the white stuff.  In the meantime, take a white page and make some tracks across the snow.  Figuratively, of course.  Write something.  Draw something.  Submit it to literary magazine by emailing your English teacher or art teacher.  We love submissions!  So use a little time over break to get creative and share the results with our editors at Sevenatenine. For now, enjoy two poems about mothers and daughters to round out your December.

Artwork by Sasha J., Grade 8

The Red Scare

Oh! How those red beauties are asking to be worn,
they stand confident and tall, ready to take down a storm.
I put them on my feet and grow two more inches,
and waddle to my momma who is cooking in the kitchen.
"Look, momma, look! I'm grown just like you."
"Jessica, sweetie, please take off those shoes."
I huff and glower, trying to sit on the ground,
but my heel slips, tripping, I come crashing down.
A loud screech, a bundle of tears, and a kiss on the cheek,

I wipe my nose, wiggle my toes, I'll stick to my sneaks.

by Jess H., Grade 9


Artwork by Nicolette S., Grade 9

What My Mother Looks Like

My mother she wears lipstick,
Mascara on her eye,
Her hair straightened,
Sometimes curled,
Mine in a pony,
Held high.

My mother goes to work all day,
Sleep running on low,
Her day long,
Sometimes never ending,
Mine too short,
Too slow.

My mother told me to stay young,
No makeup on my face,
No sleepless nights,
No weary eyes,
No hidden face,
Life's not a chase.

But now I'm older,
Long hair,
Rosy cheeks,
Two hours of sleep that’s all,
One thing I never noticed,
Is how my mother seemed to fall.

One thing I never noticed,
I didn't want to be like that at all. 

by Delaney K., Grade 9

Artwork by Erin P., Grade 9