THE MUSE
muse \ ˈmyüz \ noun.
a source of inspiration; a state of deep thought or dreamy abstract
CONTENTS
COVER
Emerson Brown
dear reader 05
ART
Spring Lakeside, Lee Kirkland 09
Follow the Lego Brick Road, Alex Wong 12
Rhythm Cycle of Day and Night, Jonathan Lin 16 | 17
Not A ‘Phase,’ Alex Wong 26
Where did the good old days go?, Ava Scott 31
Omnipotence, Jonathan Lin 47
Still Life with Assorted Fruits, Elaine Ma 48
The Plague, Jennifer Dick-Peddie 52
PHOTOGRAPHY
Heart on le Grass, Alex Wong 08
Burning Sky, Alex Wong 10
Paint, Alex Wong 11
Madison Lin 14 | 18 | 19 | 28 | 29
Enya Liu 15 Leah Cawley 21
Ariadine Antonio 22 | 23 | 36
Anjani Nabar 24 | 33
JUE 12, Thi Nguyen 27
4:07 pm, Enya Liu 30
Ruby Lee 32
Clara Schultz 34 Love, Alex Wong 35
Beauty of Water and Green, Leah Cawley 37
Juliana Bernal 39 | 42
c’est la vie, Juliana Bernal 43
Elizabeth Yang 46
POETRY
06 Paradoxical Perception, Caylee Correia
07 Artificial Love, Caitlyn Boynton
09 EE’S AND OH’S, Benjamin Mui
10 This Feeling, Angel Torres
11 I Know I Can Do It, Eesha Sivakumar
13 Shake, Alex Wong
13 Shudder, Alex Wong
14, Release, Alex Wong
15 I Know, Anik Hoskeri
18 Weary Bones, Marin Garand
20 Buoyancy of Circulated Love, Ave Pulido
21 Can You Control the Time, Thi Nguyen
22 Retired Shoes, Benjamin Mui
23 Country Lanes, Kori Zacher
24 Brianna Wiles
25 Grey Night, Benjamin Mui
28 A View Over Bustling City Lights, Benjamin Mui
29 It’s in the Past, Madison Tada
31 Where Did the Good Old Days Go?, Ava Scott
32 Concept of Time, Hannah Kitchener
33 Missing Someone, Benjamin Mui
35 Lovers on a Long Lost Night, Dhwani Kharidia
36 The Melody, Gabriel Brenner
38 | 39 The Soul on a Hill, Alex Call
40 Sisyphus, Benjamin Mui
46 Lamentations of an Older Sister, Alex Wong
49 | 50| 51 The Clock Tower, Kevin Liu
53 Dark Abyss, Nathan Elias
SHORT STORIES
27 The Girl Who Tampered With Time, Melanie Cheung
44 | 45 Mark of the Titan Lord, Jonathan Lin
SIX-WORD STORIES
41 Jonathan Lin
41 Kori Zacher
41 Nathan Elias
41 Brandon Azhar
MUSIC
34 2:05, Clara Schultz
dear reader:
We introduce to you The Muse's second edition for the 2021-2022 academic year. This spring, we decided to give submissions a theme: time. Time is a subject that can be perceived and demonstrated in a variety of ways. For high school students, time may be spent completing an assignment before a deadline or attempting to strike a balance between work and relaxation. Time may refer to how much longer our seniors have left at Mitty before heading off to college.
Students created artwork, photography, poems, and other creative works to illustrate how they interpret time. Just as with any great piece of art, interpretation belongs to the viewer. The same can be said for all of the poems, photos, and stories from your fellow students. The concept of time differs from one student to the next, and our artists’ works reflect this. As you turn the pages of The Muse, you'll find stories and poetry that we hope you will be able to relate to, and photographs and art pieces that allow you to put your own spin on the meaning of time.
The color palette and layout this semester are simplistic to not distract from the works of art in the magazine. With only deep black, muted white, and ‘burlywood’ yellow, the color scheme does not overwhelm the art pieces, which provide their own pops of color to the pages.
We end this note with the hopes that you will be able to happily peruse the carefully designed pages of The Muse, and be able to understand each student’s definition of time. As the ancient Greek philosopher Theophrastus once said, “Time is the most valuable thing a man can spend.” The students whose work is showcased spent valuable time this semester to explain their vision of time through their art, poetry, photography, and writing. We hope that you enjoy.
Madison Lin ‘25
Paradoxical Perception
Caylee Correia ‘25
Some say right now, we are living in the rumored post-death flashback. Is this why time feels so fast at times, and at other times so slow? The origin of deja vu supports this: When we feel like we have already lived a life, Or have experienced a moment, It’s because we really have. There is such a concept with death, But your life can’t flash before your eyes because Death would be impossible. If there was no such concept as time, Aging would occur much more slowly, Since we can’t keep track of how long we have lived. Our perception of time can classify as a disorder, Almost like a trial of hallucinogens.
This unnamed concept, tied with time, Rings a chime with rhyme, In which our lives are in The hands of whatever decisions we made In our initial lives. We now continue this loop, Forever reliving our best and worst moments; Our first and most recent lovers, And everything in between.
Artificial Love
Caitlyn Boynton
'23
People often use nature to describe their love, but my love has never been labeled as anything other than artificial.
Artificial, fake, man-made, a delusion.
I tried to be natural, I tried to be like the normal lovers But I am a liar.
Everyone knows I am not natural. My lover is not natural.
I am told that all I know is not real. I created this fall from grace all by myself I have been transformed into a Midas against my will. Everything I touch is artificial.
Artificial, fake, man-made, a delusion.
Are the roses that bloom between us also fake?
The iridescent red that I colored with my devotion Turned into a cold plastic within my hands. But my lover has planted a seed of salvation within me, And I have been rescued from the violence of who I was before.
Even if it is still false in the eyes of the world. They hold the thorns of my love to my throat and Denounce my savior.
But I say, so what?
We found sanctuary in our bodies Hidden away from the natural lovers. If I must hide, I will hide with my artificial creation. I will remain at the hands of my delusion for a little longer.
My tears born from the cruelty I face pale in comparison To the happiness I feel when I’m with my lover.
The world struggles to pull a smile out of me,
But it’s an ever present feature around the one I call mine.
My love has never been labeled as anything other than Artificial.
My lover is a fake. These roses are man-made. And I am nothing but a delusion.
But it’s still love nonetheless.
EE’S AND OH’S
Benjamin Mui ’22
And as we fall down on our knees
Looking up at the light flooding through the trees
How soft the grass feels under my toes
Pleading to nature, “Teach me how to grow”
Softly falls the flaking snow
Preferring the cold instead of darkness we’ll never know
Plunging into nothingness or dreams in our sleep
Remembering the love we give and not the love we keep
How I love listening to your sweet melodies
But I still see shadows of distant memories
And just as the rushing river flows
Run and wash away the blood and pains of the soul
Now I demand back the heart that you stole
So that I may once again feel complete and whole
And how fortunate it is that we continue to bleed
The red confirmation that I can still feel something
Lakeside Lee Kirkland ‘23
This Feeling Angel Torres ‘25
What is this feeling
It hurts but also feels good
I feel lost but yet so close
Just out of reach of something I already have
So new but feels like an old friend who would always be by your side
But you stopped talking to that friend because they hurt you
Feels like my chest is floating
Then my chest is sinking
I am so confused
Is this No... Is it...
I Know I Can Do It
Eesha Sivakumar ‘25
Good times, and bad times, are part of life I tell my mind, Be steady and wise I know I can do it
I feel despair, I feel defeated, I have many things to repair I know I can do it
Piece by piece
Step by step, like a bud becoming a flower, Not everything comes with ease But, I know I can do it
I strengthen my resolve
Like a passing cloud, this too shall pass I am ready to evolve Bring on any challenge—I know I can do it
Paint
Alex Wong ‘22
Follow the Lego Brick Road
Alex Wong ‘22
Shake
Alex Wong ‘22
Crown of needles
Gently piercing,
Silvery sparks
Alight in my mind
Stretching and grasping
Trembling spirits
Shivering hands
Still.
Shudder
Alex Wong ‘22
The pricking upon my eye
A halo of thorns
Adorns my skin
A trio on either side
I stare into the wide expanse
Lavender seas--
Gentle protrusions
Caressing electricity sparking.
Release Alex Wong ‘22
there are many fish in the sea-yes thank you. i know.
but of every fish i’ve seen so far it was this one that i chose to care for. to love and hold dear to me-scales glimmering in the sunlight. to capture it in a tank is cruel and terrible. walking on the coast i watch it dance away from me.
I Know
Anik Hoskeri
I know. I know
The way of the world. Do I know How to grow? That’s a question. I know
How to feel my expressions. I know The feelings of people. I know Some call me the saint, some call me all knowing. I know But I wish sometimes I could grow more. I know
Sometimes I wish I could learn, experience more, and grow.
Weary Bones
Marin Garand ‘23
I find myself in front of an echo of a home long gone.
The front door, once a lovely cabernet color, is now an ashy brown. The trim is peeling and the paint falls off in sheets. I try my best not to touch anything, not wanting it all to fall apart.
Maybe it’s too late for that.
The clunking noise of my suitcase rolling over the stone tiles sounds like high heels clicking on the stairs, and I close my eyes, lost in the fleets of memory.
I can hear the delighted shrieks of two little girls chasing each other around the living room, fingers reaching wildly.
Chili bubbles on the stove, cats wind between barstools. Love curves in the curl of his hand on her hip, and she laughs--
My eyes fly open, and I let the pain slip out in a drop onto my cheek, splattering to the floor. Shadows of forgotten people shift around the room, whispering. I close my eyes again, wishing to find that family again, but they are already lost. I nod quickly, and the house is gaunt, silent.
My eyes run over the collapsed staircase; the dusty floors; the invisible handprints that pain has left on these old, frail walls.
I make sure the door closes gently behind me, and I let time swallow the bones of the home that rests behind it.
Buoyancy of Circulated Love
Ave Pulido '23
I will always remember that day, your hand like a light in my shadows my dear heart couldn’t stay at bay as I began to dip my feet into the shallows. Drifted out to sea, the retired feelings flooding back, although my mind begged to disagree, the heart speaks that this isn’t just an act. Further away I am drifted reminded of those times of the past. The waves that have me lifted understand that this infatuation has outlast. The warmth of the rays that beat down on my face bring me back to those days when it was your smile that always had me embraced. Those times are now gone. It is here we meet again. Recounting what we’ve undergone, I stand here with you in the sane. Although the future is uncertain, all I hope is that I’m not a burden. What I do know now that is for certain is love circulates time and time again.
Leah Cawley ‘25
Can You Control the Time
Thi Nguyen '23
can you control the time?
because you keep me waiting even if I am disappointed it’s officially spring now but it still feels like the dead of autumn how else would that be possible?
did you control the time? when you’re in love does time pass by quickly or does it feel like a soothing slow it was both; moments filled with more electricity than time could comprehensively capacitate that it went by slow, but the collective experience was too fast, rather too short
will you control the time?
I want to go back, or no, let's skip to the future for healing a physical tangible warmth can’t just transform into cold breezes of wind
you do control the time turning a reality and truth into only a memory or maybe even just a dream actually, they say we didn't exist in this timeline at all
Retired Shoes
Benjamin Mui ‘22
Lifeless lay the line of long looking shoes
But flowing are the memories inside them
Back during the time with nothing to lose
Eager and crisp before the journey ahead
Like the ballerina whose dancing ceased too soon
Those tippy-toes and pirouettes lighting up the stage
Last but for a sliver of time before the curtains close
The once graceful dancer reduced to nervous and depressed
Like the runner whose legs would carry him miles
Where youth was indeed his greatest friend
While age slowly outpaced his struggles
And overtook him before crossing the finish line
Like the veteran whose boots walked bloodied swamps
Innocence was the first casualty of battle
Followed by the friends lost along the way
Their final words or screams echoing again
Although the shoes sit serving as a reminder
Of our past glories and triumphs… our golden years
We still sneak our ways out and forward
Savoring love for a time far shorter Than that of which we’ll be gone
Finding life and fire beyond days retired
Country Lanes Kori Zacher ‘23
She drove a ratty, old, sky blue Ford pickup With a rust-riddled white roof. The rubber tires squeaked and squelched And crunched along the Gravel and dust country lanes We roamed.
The wind on our hair, leaves blowing by — We were Free souls, spirits conjoined, and it felt Like Forever.
Brianna Wiles '23
Time:
So short on time, There wasn’t enough time
Before the day creeped up on us
Like we never could’ve expected It wasn’t real, it couldn’t be real—
Neon brilliance was all I could see
As a hymn filled the dull air around me It was over now, I would finally see
Grey Night
Benjamin Mui ‘22
The Grey Night creeps above the hill And dashes away the sunbeams That shone across the valley
The once golden hills Now fade away into dusk
But the silencing of the crow And slumbering of the rooster Still fail to bring peace and quiet
As Night has only begun To reveal her orchestra in concert
So it begins with the clap of thunder And the pitter of the rain
Followed by the patter of the prowlers
All the while the chirping of the birds Is replaced by the singing of the crickets
The buzz of the tiny lanterns hovering in air Illuminate the groaning trees swaying Their leaves rustle in the frosty gale And fall into the grumbling river Flowing softly across the way
Finally the lone spectator Standing solemnly in the meadow
With tears falling in the fields Mourning the death of a rose Wilting among the grass
Not A ‘Phase’ Alex Wong ‘22
The Girl Who Tampered With Time
Melanie Cheung ‘24
With a swing of her legs, the girl hopped out of bed. Hazel eyes blinked, eyelids closing just slightly in an attempt to shield her sensitive pupils from the sunlight streaming through the two windows next to her. Ding-Dong! Alina groaned as she heard the sound of her doorbell ringing. Who on this gods-forsaken earth rings the doorbell at six in the morning... The girl got up anyway, groaning and grumbling under her breath in irritation. “I’m coming!” she shouted toward the doorway. Her mouth opened wide, head tipping back as she yawned and rolled her head in a circle at the same time. A pleasant smile crossed her face as she heard a few satisfying pops. How relaxing. Alina continued on her way toward her dresser, taking her time. She paused in her steps, however, contemplating the idea of a visitor. Had she really been expecting anyone today? Listing the few
A View Over Bustling City Lights
Benjamin Mui ‘22
Chirp chirp go the singing crickets
On a warm and humid summer night
Strolling brightly lit trails to the mountainside
Leaning over a fence to admire the view
Where the rumbling of cars on the freeway
Is but a buzz and a line of lights down below
Driving parallel and unaware
Of the wondrous river made beautiful
By shining lights reflecting off the surface
And yet while the scene far away beckons me
I find myself entranced by another
Walking gracefully beside me—smiling
Whose hair is wrapped in a messy bun
Allowing stray strands to quiver in the wind
What deep breath of fresh air void of fine dust
Lifts the veil over my eyes and I see the world
As one of infinite opportunities and joy
For those who use youth as their guide
And earnest dreams as their weapon
To harness the time we’ve been given
Along with the second chance
Like the burning lights of the buildings
Creating a city amongst the darkness of night
Dreams such as these make crystal clear
That romance or the potential of it
Is worth living for.
It’s in the Past Madison Tada ‘25
I hope you know I still care about you
Even if I do not show it enough I want to have a lot of fun with you
But it would probably be kind of tough
We act like we are strangers all the time
We can't even look at each other now I can remember when I called you mine
Now the memories in my head are quite loud
I miss the times we used to live and laugh
Remember when we would call for hours
But it seems like it will be in the past
Now I'm alone picking my own flowers
I miss you with most of my heart and more
But now I must move on and close that door
Where Did the Good Old Days Go?
Ava Scott ‘22
Where did the good old days go
When we were Captain of the ship steering the helm I miss the beauty in make believe
Now there are things I need to achieve The quiet moments have gone unnoticed I notice them now
But I’m remembering how I didn’t fully value them then Is it too late
To try to recreate the good old days I want to be more carefree
Travel as far as a bumblebee
Let’s sail all of the waves and chaotic sea
Though they crash into me, that’s how the water flows
Let’s make paper boats, and be children always Cause that’s how we make the new good old days
Concept of Time
Hannah Kitchener '25
The minutes go quickly
The hours slowly
Days fast
Suddenly the year is in the past
Lots to do in a short time
Make a rhyme
Read a book
Find a new look
Time is a strange thing
The concept makes a head ring
A month ago feels like the day prior
Days burn away like a fire
Anjani Nanbar ‘25
Missing Someone
Benjamin Mui ‘22
I woke up to the rains coming again
Pitter patter against my window sill
Or maybe the sound was that of my heart
Fluttering itself awake—ever fragile
Jarred and frightened by the sound of thunder
I thought of someone close today
Close yet somehow as far as can be
Like water dripping down the vine leaves above
Like the walk sign changing to “stop”
Or the lofty clouds sailing peacefully onward
Yet the sun still shines through the rain
Indeed sparkling more brilliantly in the sky
Causing the rocks on which we stand to glow
While watching a little bumbling creek
Created by the surely passing shower
And as the city is covered in purple and blue
The setting sun casts its fading orange hue
Leaving the multitude of cars passing in the night
Seemingly aimless about their ways of travel
Leading back to home… or nowhere
Sketching the round lake that was ours
Where I was given the chance to love someone
Not everyone gets the chance to love somebody
Along with having some amazing times with them
Which is a million times better than none at all
I’m missing someone like you might be too
Thinking to see them soon…or never again
The times might be stopped but never gone
It’s ok to miss someone because that means
You Love
And there’s nothing wrong with that
Now is there?
Lovers On a Long Lost Night
Dhwani Kharidia ‘23
The melody of the cool breeze
Grazing the branches and Whistling on the leaves
As it dances in a dark night’s air
The still water softly gliding
Through the depths of the lovers’ world
Chiming in the moonlight like the song of angels
As they sit on the moist dirt
The atmosphere covered with a blue luminescence
Their world shrinks into nothing
But the breathtaking scene in front
Lit by the bright, glistening moonlight
The lovers rest their heads
On each other’s warm shoulder
And look into the depths
Of perpetual bliss
The Melody
Gabriel Brenner ‘22
For as long as I remember I’ve heard the melody, the melody that is broadly spoken. Continually hearing the repetition that life is too short, an idea I had no resentment to. Since the dawn of the melody, I’ve tried to live in the moment, pretending as though each one may have been my very last. However, it is only here, enduring my final moments, that I feel those words are understood. Upon reminiscing, the only emotion I possess is sorrow. Sorrow for the forgotten dreams and the unaddressed regrets. Sorrow for the youth that I feel is now wasted, which lacked the presence of my present wisdom. I tried to live a life that would allow me to face death with certainty, only to realize the effort to be aimless. The potentiality of slipping into an infinite void of unconsciousness is not of my concern, it is only the inevitable travesty that as my death grows near what lies behind me is a completed book written in the language of permanence. Life is not a game I asked to play, and on the cusp of death saying that to live is to die does not appear to be a needlessly pessimistic phrase. I could’ve read all the wise words the philosophers and poets have said since the dawn of humanity, but none of it would have prepared me for facing the abyssal plains of death that lie ahead, which forsake me from all that lies behind. I could have traveled to Thoreau’s woods, only to find that in doing so I surrendered the opportunity to traverse the stars. I could have lived deliberately, only to find I had not lived freely. I could have become the absurd hero, so aptly revered by Camus, only to find I had become a villain to my principle. I could have done a lot, but I did nothing. This melodic melancholy that is habitually termed life, something that begins and ends so unpredictably, is only beautiful because of all that lies in between. I just wish I had understood the melody before it was too late.
Beauty of Water and Green
Leah Cawley ‘25
The Soul on a Hill
Alex Call ‘23
A Soul bathed in brightness lies soft on a hill, It twiddles its thumbs—takes from Life what it will. It thinks about thinking, it dreams about dreaming.
Briefly it wonders, Well, where is the meaning?
The clouds? No, they rain. The sun? Far too bright. Perhaps it is all merely dark cosmic night: A force of indifference, a will of the No, Or maybe the Yes—if fate deems it be so.
O’ Night, cruel old master! What game do you play, When Time in its hurry shall come but not stay? And if nothing is whither and nothing is whence Then why even bother to try and make sense?
—Oh but see how the birds chirp, aperch in their nest! And mother and father hold child abreast, And flowers abloom in the thickets unfold Under the sunset like rivers of gold.
If this is the nothing, is nothing so bad?
Perhaps the Soul’s purpose is just to be glad:
To witness the beauty that Life has in store And not to waste time vainly wishing for more.
But it’s sad, nay it’s mad—no, it’s glad! Just be glad! It tries but it cries and now everything dies. It sees all around it in steady decay, And weeps hollow breaths as it dreams of what may Be in the Will-be, the Was, or the Now: The love and the loss of what Life may allow, A dutiful reaper collecting his wages, A meadow of candlelight, lost to the ages.
It fears and it frets, no! It steadies its breath—
In out, up down, Beat beat, thump thump.
It closes its eyes, rests a hand on its heart, Neither ready to end, nor ready to start
Sisyphus
Benjamin Mui ‘22
The snow drifts down slowly today
A side effect of the winter chill
Everything white as the moon at night
But all without the glow
It’s all just part of life’s challenges
They roll soundly down at times
Or crash suddenly to the bottom
So it seems that the illusion of control
Over the highs and the lows
Is nothing more than Sisyphus’s eternal doom
To roll the boulder of life high up the hill
Only to have it fall before the top
Yet somehow there is a meaning
A heroic act to push day after day
To raise a clenched fist to the absurdity
That is living tomorrow’s today
To view it all upon high
Being able to realize both how far we’ve come
And how far we’ve yet to go
Given a choice to either leave the task undone
Or with triumphant smiles
March down the hill to begin again.
I’m beside myself; cloning machine works. Brandon Azhar ‘25
Too much time, but never enough. Kori Zacher ‘23
Don’t tell stories; live them out. Jonathan Lin ‘23
Didn't finish; I gave it up. Nathan Elias ‘22
Mark of the Titan Lord
Jonathan Lin ‘23
Before the world came to know the likes of Earth and the "planets" that revolve around the sun, there existed the Arenos galaxy. A collection of gas, dust particles, and its stars, held together by gravity, forming a truly magnificent beauty of purple-blue beyond compare.
In this galaxy, there existed three kingdoms that people called home: Tartarus, Kalos, and Olympus, standing powerfully over the land. Interconnected they were, life was ever prosperous.
Independent, peaceful, and joyous as they were, these kingdoms were left unbothered for millennia. Although diverse and vastly different, they were one. Life blossomed and prospered for the lifeforms that inhabited such lands, each one unique in skill and spirit.
Life was good, to say the least. Days were run on a day-to-day basis as weeks slowly passed them by. Their roles were theirs for the selection as civilians lived quite happily with the hustle and bustle of the day-to-day.
However, one must not undermine the grandeur of such kingdoms, for each kingdom was protected by a powerful guardian warrior, each unique in spirit and strength. Under their supervision, guidance, and care, all was well. It seemed as if harm could not be done to this paradise.
That all took a turn one early, uninviting Sunday morning when the sounding of church bells, the soothing clash of metal from the blacksmith’s iron hammers, was blurred and swallowed by the clash of swords and the smokey, smoggy haze that began to arise from Kalos, one of the three beloved kingdoms. It was as if God’s power and protection had been put into question. It was as if one’s will had been put to the test.
A dark, great, sinister evil had always existed somewhere off in the distance, unforgotten. An unforgettable secret in the hearts of the guardians, which they hid to protect those below. Battered down and beaten, tortured, and feared for his potential return, which would be unstoppable. Despite being imprisoned, this fiend managed to escape. A fiend discovered in the realms of myth. A fiend once captured, held no more.
The peaceful world that was once known would be thrown into unyielding chaos once more.
Lamentations of an Older Sister Alex Wong ‘22
I wish to hold you Entirely so
To protect you from their barbed words.
But to embrace a cactus Leaves spines within my skin To comfort you would leave me More sorrowful as You use their thorns on me.
Why do you hurt me so. I wonder if You realize because You are my smart little brother But sometimes you radiate A coldness that Never seems to go away.
Omnipotence
Jonathan Lin ‘23
Still Life with Assorted Fruits
Elaine Ma ‘22
The Clock Tower
Kevin Liu ‘24
Christening
Hundreds of years ago, maybe more a small village stood on the moor
Its adults worked hard all day
While its children laughed and played
The houses were sculpted out of stone and sticks
The village hall: gleaming alabaster bricks
The outer walls, of earth pounded firm
The main street, of cobblestone lined with ferns
Sadly, something was missing, the elders all knew They needed something to rally to “What should be built?” the elders asked
A clock tower, they decided, but no easy task
However, the people agreed without resistance
And everyone came to the builders’ assistance
They worked in the day, with the sun on fire
They labored at night, below the moonlight spires
Up went the bells, of burnished bronze
Forged to perfection with a hammer and tongs
On the forty-ninth day, they rang loud and clear
The labor complete; the villagers cheered.
And it came tumbling down
The chaos scorched the land, dried the grass
It was like Abaddon: no one wanted to pass
Blackened and twisted were the trees
The sky mourned with a gentle breeze
The town, too, deserted and empty
In the dirt, skeletons aplenty Valiant defenders they were in life Suddenly ceased with the stroke of a knife
The tower, how glorious it was
The tower, how dead it is
Years before, it shone with light
Now, there is nothing but night
The storm could not bash it to the ground
When the floods came, it did not drown
But age won during the final round
From that moment forth, the bells tolled each hour of the day
Tick tock, clang clang, what a wondrous display!
And it all came tumbling down
The curtains were in tatters
Broken, were the wooden rafters
Gone, was all the laughter
When it all came tumbling down
The bell tolled one last time as it shattered against the stones
After it all came tumbling down
Ruins
A hill in the distance, topped with weathered rock
On the side there was a mangled clock
Tick tock, tick tock
The mockingbird mocked
The wood had long since faded to dust
The iron was red from rust
Bronze bells: dented and crushed
Through the devastated sight, the wind rushed
The village had lived through a time of prosperity
But it had now faded into obscurity
In the history books, it was nonexistent
Various sources were inconsistent
Then, the storm attacked again, its blades much stronger
The rains fell, harder and harder
Soon, the village ruins were swept away by flood
And the clock tower was there no longer
When the water subsided, ruins scattered the plain Debris lay all around, washed clean by the rain
Of the clock tower, only one thing remained
The bells, a monument to those who were slain
They lay in the mud, forgotten by time
Oh, the poor bells that no longer chime
Spectral Ball
On one night of the year, a ghostly tower rises in all its glory
When described, it seems almost hallucinatory
But its not fake, its real
Some say they can even hear the mysterious bells peal
When the clock strikes twelve, the spirits start their dance
To melodies that can put one in a trance
The music tells of brave heroes, strong and true
Of fair maidens, and daydreaming little boys too
Faster and faster, the ghosts spin in their waltz
They dance without rest, as if they are enthralled
Their shimmering gowns and ivory suits twirl
The moonlight glints off their pearls
Be cautious, however, of joining the revelry
Because, once one goes, they can never leave
They will too be trapped in the ball
Reduced to something less than mortal
Ultimately, the sun rises over the peaks
The shimmering phantom of the tower grows weak
For a moment, the bells clang again, echoing across the valley
Then, it disappears again into mystery.
How beautiful and loud the bells were when they rang
How faint are the echos as they fade away.
The Plague
Jennifer Dick-Peddie ‘24
Dark Abyss
Nathan Elias ‘22
A few weeks ago, I caught A vision of my own Death.
Everyone was dressed in Black, black gowns with Black caps,
Bodies falling through the rye, Though I couldn’t see through–To what.
I nearly fell into the dark abyss As I stared ahead into the Cloaked figure seated In front of me,
As the reaper’s voice boomed overhead, Croaking the names of the deceased one by one, In alphabetical order by last name
Now the clock is ticking until I meet that moment, For real this time–
Unsure of whether to welcome it, Or do everything I can to stop it;
Unsure of whether I woke up from a dream, Or went back to sleep.
Moderator
Mr. Kevin Brazelton
Proofreader
Mrs. Janelle Kroenung
Administrator
Mr. Keith Mathews
Editors
Luna Anderson
Ariadine Antonio
Jules Banucci
Elizabeth Joseph Guhan Karthik
Enya Liu
Arnav Mishra
Stella Park
Arielle Rizal
Sara Simoni
Chelsea Soriano
Ria Sudhir
Alinna Villaroman
Kori Zacher
Archbishop Mitty High School
Literary Magazine
Mission Statement
The Muse: AMHS Student Literary Magazine is a collection of original, creative content produced by students of Archbishop Mitty. The purpose of this magazine is to support students' creative expression, to allow students to share their words and experiences in an imaginative way, and to establish a community of artists, writers, and thinkers. By creating an outlet for student voices, The Muse hopes to foster a culture of self-expression and interconnection throughout the entire student body.
Thanks for reading this issue of The Muse: AMHS Student Literary Magazine! Our creative ventures can have a profound impact on our understanding of the world around us. It is our sincere hope that the content within this issue has inspired you to think, write, and dream. Please on the lookout for more issues in the future. We hope to see you again as we publish more fantastic work created by AMHS students.
– The Editors