Tuesday, March 21, 2023

A Gallery Where Comments Are Welcome

You may notice that this year on Sevenatenine, you are reading more than one poem by the same poet, and becoming familiar with the voice each individual poet brings to their body of work.  

What are you noticing? Is there a certain poet whose work you would like to praise?  Leave us a comment and share your thinking! 


Artwork by Sjostjedt Z., Grade 9


The Colder Side of the Room

 

I step through the door

and greet a familiar issue.

I sit down, feeling rigid

it’s colder on this side of the room.

 

A drab and relentless breeze bombards my face

my shoulders shift in their icy prison

I start to lean away.

Away and away, to the inviting warmth that’s so close

it’s so close now, just like how this class is close to finished…

but I take a look back into their eyes and I find my body has been turned to stone

I worry that if I return to the warmth

the ice I my veins will melt and all the words will come seeping out

I really don’t want that

I can’t just leave them alone here…

 

So I sigh with one last longing glance at the heat so irrefutably close,

my cracked and frostbitten lips curve into a smile.

 

I slide back

to the colder side of the room.

 

by Emma S., Grade 7

 

Artwork by Ibragamov, D., Grade 8

Little Love Stories I Keep In My Journal To Daydream About On Later Occasions

 

I wrote about his smile.

This one I want to see in my dreams.

And now I’m afraid of the words that I want to say.

 

Keep falling deeper into the dimples—

I love dimples.

A tacenda between me and me.

 

My fairy of perfume.

Spill the scent and trap me in a misty haze.

Let me fall into the complex profile, eager to learn more.

 

I can draw the limped crescents of his eyes when he smiles.

Wrinkle for wrinkle.

Cheeks rosy and puffed.

 

I should respect myself as much as I respect him.

I love him as much as I should love myself.

But for now, I’m perfectly not so perfect at daydreaming about what we could be.

 

More so what I could be.

Because our possible love story I keep writing about is just me,

Falling in love with myself through someone else.

 

Which is why I continue to write these two little love stories for myself.

Because I deserve to be loved just as much as every other person in the world.

Daydream or not.

 

by Jaime P., Grade 9

 

Artwork by Aubrey S., Grade 9



Not Yesterday, Nor Tomorrow

 

Today.

Today, it’s awfully sunny.

Yesterday wasn’t

and nobody can say what tomorrow will be.

      Today, it’s not too hot, or too cold

                 It’s just today.

                      Because it’s just today.

                         Not yesterday, nor tomorrow

                                                 It’s just today.

Sometimes,

I hate today.

Sometimes,

I love today.

Sometimes,

it feels like yesterday.

Sometimes,

tomorrow will feel like today.

Sometimes,

the sun is too bright.

       And I just want to choke it with my blanket, hiding myself.

                                                          I think I hide from today often.

                                                              Today is terribly bright.

                                                   Today might rain.

                                    But it doesn’t matter, it’s just today.

                       Not yesterday, nor tomorrow.

                             Just today.

Just Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday.

            Just today.

                 Just one day…

                           One day today will end for me.

                                  But for now, it’s just today.

Just today.

 

by Ellana K., Grade 7


Artwork by Hannah S., Grade 9

 


Bored thoughts of an unimaginable being

 

Get lost in the lines

Of those corduroy pants

And follow the flare

Of that green plaid sweater

Swallow the squeak

Of the brown leather shoes

 

And cry at the body attached

 

by Nia H., Grade 9

 

Tuesday, February 21, 2023

Poems for the Longest/Shortest Month of the Year

February feels at once formidable and fleeting, and this year's weather and lack of a snowy slowdown has not helped us much! It's the kind of chagrin that only the arts can heal. Enjoy this month's post! 


 Ghosted 

 

12:51 pm 

Every other day 

We pass each other in the hall 

Not a single word to say. 

 

by Anya A., Grade 9 



Artwork by Majda F., Grade 9





[a beautiful sunset…] 

 

a beautiful sunset 

rays warm my moribund body 

remember my surreptitious past 

pariah kid 

 

by Nia H., Grade 9 



Artwork by Tyler H., Grade 8


 

Excerpts from “A Musing on the Falsity of Man’s Favorite Thoughts 


 

At the end of all things 

The world will be quiet 

At least, you would think 

You would think in the darkness 

We would lay down and cry 

For all we have lost 

For the things we’ve not tried 

But if you ask me what I think 

I think we will sing 

Like olden sea shanties 

To sing all together 

No matter tone nor key 

So grab an instrument 

Pour out your heart 

And when the world tears us apart 

At least we’ll have a last piece of art 

 

* 

 

Life is not poetic 

Pain is not brave 

To hurt is not intellectual 

Blood was never scarlet 

It never shown 

Or  g  l  i  s  t  e  n  e  d 

Those were words we wrote 

Not truths kept sacred 

Life is not poetic 

Death is not beautiful 

And in the end 

Blood 

is 

    just 

                       red 

 

* 

 

A lot of the time I think people misunderstand our generation 

Yes, we are dreamers 

But please, look at what we’re dreaming of: 

The future we imagine isn’t a fancy sci-fi 

It’s not flying cars, 

                               or robot dogs, 

                                                       or convenient automation 

It is faceless governments 

                                          and thorough lies 

It is sickness, 

                      it is pandemics, 

                                                 it is brutality 

It is the last dregs of hope trying desperately to survive 

 

Yes, we are dreamers 

But please, do not call us naïve, or ignorant 

We are here 

                    We are aware 

                                          And we are deeply, 

                                                                           deeply, 

                                                                                         scared 

 

* 

 

Your writing is beautiful… 

Your words are carved from ivory 

Your stories built with alabaster brick 

Every pen stroke is neat 

                                                        sharp 

                                                        shiny 

                                                        ebony 

                                                                 ink 

   Everything you tell is told with such eloquence 

 

My… 

Your mind must really be 

Such a terrible, terrible place 

 

by Mackenzie J., Grade 8 


Artwork by Mackenzie J., Grade 8