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Page 19 text:
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Sonnet: The Storm Swirling, twirling , round me whirling, Th rough the air the raindrops fly From a sad and sombre sky That weeps great bitter tears. Flashing, lashing, loudly crashing, The lightning breaks and thunder roars. As cries within grim Hades’ doors Are heard midst whistling winds. Oh tempest! wreaking vengeance On this Earth with raging force, Abate that hate and fury so deep within your soul, And return to heaven’s dome again your cruel and mighty lance. So let Apollo with his faery steeds once more o’er heaven’s course Go forth and with a joyous sun this dreary Earth, condole. Patty Jane Parrish, High Nine. Homesickness Beyond Fort Sherman’s palm trees Red glows the dying sun, And in the blue arch overhead The stars shine one by one. (g We dream of tropic waters, Of friendships strong and true, Blue sky, soft mist, and friendly stars Panama, we dream of you ! Barbara Matthews, Low Nine. April Sidewalks drying from the cool April rain — Green grass springing between the blue and gray stones, A yellow tabby-cat dreaming in the sun. Daffodils and crocuses waving on the hillside — Green ivy blowing on worn gray trails — And the cool , rain-freshened wind Swirling the green leaves from the elm trees — Berkeley . . . in April. Patricia Danforth, High Nine.
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Page 18 text:
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LITERATURE This term Garfield sponsored a short story and poetry contest. A committee of teachers decided on the following as the winners of the poetry contest: First, Vers Libre, Marjorie McKee; second, The Storm: A Sonnet, Patricia Parrish; third, Homesickness, Barbara Matthews; April, Patricia Danforth; Trini- dad, Betty Ricker. Honorable mention: Catherine Mitchelson, Janice Pape, Emily Stout, Frank Ryan, Elinor Skimmings, Allen Sugden, John Brenneis, Gwendolyn Gerken, Jack Selsted, Madelyn McGlvnn. The winners of the short story contest are: First, Flanders Field, Phillip Taylor; second, Mystery in the Storm, John Brenneis; third, Chornie, Betty Ricker. Honorable mention: Marjorie McKee, Bob McCarthy, Melville Puterbaugh, Madelyn McGlvnn, Olive Clarke, Mercedes Stroube, Nancy MacCaughey. Vers Libre It often makes me smile to think How in another time l used to think that poems were poems, And so, as such, must rhyme. But things are different now, you see; No longer do I frozen, And when I needs must rr poe a poem,” With smiles 1 sit me down. For some kind friend of mine indeed, Invented modern verse, So now I write the following stuff, And sometimes even ivorse. My soul. Exposed to the cruel, hard sunlight, it cringes. Yet ’tis depant. I watch it curiously, lying in the siveet Lush Grass, The winged beetles make their way towards home. Making Tiny paths. 1 love the sea. Retrospect Marjorie McKee, High Niue
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Page 20 text:
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Trinidad The long, white sweep of a sandy beach Kimmed arotmd tuith cocoanut palms; The gold green flash of a paraquet , A purple perfumed orchid spray; The lazy drift of a butterfly Across a tender bamboo screen, The sweet hot scent of cinnamon Captain Kidd, and Tort O’Spain, Captured galleons — the Spanish Main — All these things are brought to me When I hear the surge of a restless sea. Betty Ricker, Low Nine. FLANDERS FIELDS In a nearby field the larks sang gaily; a laughing stream bubbled over the rocks and the roots of the giant aged oaks of the narrow, little glen. But a low rumbling sound that seemed to shake the very earth drew nearer, and little groups of terrified peasants hurriedly passed. Suddenly, the lark stopped singing, and the rumbling and roaring seemed to penetrate into us, numbing and dulling our senses. Then soon a steady tramp, tramp, tramp, was heard, and rows of grim-faced men filed past — all marching toward the roar. Every few minutes there was a rush of peasants, with all their possessions in little carts, which they pulled behind them. Another group of grim-faced men filed past; grim-faced, for this was a grim business — war. Still more passed, some dressed in the skyblue of France, others in the uniforms of England, with colorful banners flying above. Overhead, we heard roars; and looking up, we discovered the eyes of the army,” the air corps, flying to their stations. Suddenly, a rising scream was heard, and the earth rose beneath our feet. But where was the stream? Where were the oaks? Instead, we saw a great gaping hole which the little stream was filling rapidly, as though ashamed of its wound. The roar could then be distinguished as the rattle of machine guns, the roars of the cannon; and still the grim-faced men filed past in ever increasing numbers. The time changes. The location is the same; the lark again sings; the stream bubbles and laughs, but the scene seems different. What can it be? Now we see. The harvest in the distant field is that of Death, not that of the peasant. The scene is one of almost indescribable beauty, and the hallowed place can not fail to impress us. » . », v . «», y Although our strife-torn world seems on the verge of another great catastrophe, we hope it will listen to the mute lesson this and countless similar places tell. We also hope it will not be necessary for Death to reap again a harvest, more terrible than the last. Then this poem will not have been written in vain:
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