Thursday, 13 December 2012

Spellings

Lightning

Definition- 
a. An abrupt, discontinuous natural electric discharge in the atmosphere.
b. The visible flash of light accompanying such a discharge.

In a Sentence-
1. They say that lightning never strikes the same place twice.
2. The lightning streaked across the pitch black sky in a long white blur.
3. As I watched the sky I saw a spark of lightning and the rumble of thunder followed.

Sunday, 9 December 2012

Shakespeare


   William Shakespeare was baptized April 26 1564, though his birth date is unknown. His birthplace was Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire, England and he died 23 April 1616, also in Stratford-upon-Avon. 
   Shakespeare was an English poet, dramatist and actor. He is often considered as the greatest dramatist of all time and is known as the English national poet. No writers living reputation can compare to that of Shakespeare. His plays were written in the late 16th and early 17th centuries for a small repertory theatre and they are now performed and read more often and in more countries.
   After 1599 Shakespeare’s plays were performed in the Globe theatre. Shakespeare had been performing with the Lord Chamberlain’s Men since 1594 and in early 1599 he paid 12.5% of the Globe theatres building cost. He did so as a lead share holder in the company. The investment meant that Shakespeare and the other leading actors a share of the company’s profit and a share of their playhouse.
   At age 18, in 1582, he married Anne Hathaway, a woman who was eight years older than he. Their first child, Susanna, was born on May 26, 1583, about six months after the marriage ceremony. Anne gave birth some 21 months after the arrival of Susanna to twins, named Hamnet and Judith, who were christened on February 2, 1585. Thereafter William and Anne had no more children. They remained married until his death in 1616.
Facts-
-Shakespeare had seven siblings. They were: Joan (1558); Margaret (1562); Gilbert (1566); Joan II (1569); Anne (1571); Richard (1574) and Edmund (1580).
-Shakespeare and Anne Hathawy had three children together – a son, Hamnet, who died in 1596, and two daughters, Susanna and Judith. His only granddaughter Elizabeth – daughter of Susanna – died childless in 1670. Shakespeare therefore has no descendants.
-Shakespeare died a rich man. He made several gifts to various people but left his property to his daughter, Susanna. The only mention of his wife in Shakespeare’s own will is: “I gyve unto my wief my second best bed with the furniture”. The “furniture” was the bedclothes for the bed.
-Shakespeare was buried in the Holy Trinity Church, Stratford-upon-Avon. He put a curse on anyone daring to move his body from that final resting place. His epitaph was:
Good friend for Jesus’ sake forbear,
To dig the dust enclosed here:
Blest be the man that spares these stones,
And curst be he that moves my bones.                                                                                             Though it was customary to dig up the bones from previous graves to make room for others, Shakespeare’s remains are still undisturbed.
-One of Shakespeare’s relatives on his mother’s side, William Arden, was arrested for plotting against Queen Elizabeth I, imprisoned in the Tower of London and executed.
-During his life, Shakespeare wrote 37 plays and 154 sonnets.His last play The Two Noble Kinsmen is reckoned to have been written in 1613 when he was 49 years old. While he was writing the plays at such a pace he was also conducting a family life, a social life and a full business life, running an acting company and a theatre. 
-Shakespeare is the second most quoted writer in the English language – after the various writers of the Bible.
-Shakespeare's Globe Theatre burnt down on 29th June 1613 after a cannon shot set fire to it during a performance of Henry VIII.

Bibliography-    
-http://moodle.deyeshigh.co.uk/mod/page/view.php?id=519
-http://www.nosweatshakespeare.com/resources/shakespeare-facts/

Monday, 19 November 2012

Play-doh model X



I chose to make this model as it represents the throne and crown that Claudius stole from his brother when he stole his life when he murdered him by pouring ear poison down his ear when he was sleeping helplessly and peacefully in his orchard. (Yes I know, worst play-doh model EVER!)  

Wednesday, 14 November 2012

Hamlet- Act 1: Scene 1- Summary X

Hamlet Act 1: Scene 1

It begins in Denmark on one of the castle towers. It is a cold night. It is the changing of the guards, Barnado is taking the place of Francisco at midnight. Barnado is shortly joined by Marcellus and Horatio. Marcellus and Barnado have asked Horatio to join them on the watch so he may also see the ghost of the dead King of Denmark that they have seen twice before. Horatio does not believe in the ghost though and he believes that they're hallucinating.
 Then at 1 am the ghost of the late King of Denmark appears and the group push Horatio to speak to it as he is well educated. The small group believe that this is a bad omen and ponder on whether young Fortinbras- son of the recently deceased Fortinbras, the late King of Norway (killed by Hamlet in the war against Denmark and Norway) is really gathering thugs from the outskirts of the country and our planning to take back the land that old Fortinbras lost. The group start to become worried that the ghost is here because he has started this war and that there is a sudden increase in the manufacturing of weaponry and that they themselves are on guard for that very reason. They think that the ghost is something to worry about and relate their situation with that of the Roman Empires when Julius Caesar was about to be assassinated and lots of bad signs appeared. 
 The ghost reappears and they try to stop it from leaving again by acting rash and when they think the ghost is about to speak a rooster crows. Horatio tries to order it to stay but the ghost retreats to whence it came. They talk about how the rooster tells when ghostly beings must return. They agree that their efforts in keeping the ghost there through force was futile and agree that they should tell Hamlet of what they have seen and that they owe it to him to tell him. They believe that the ghost will speak to Hamlet and they set off that morning to find him.

Sunday, 4 November 2012

5 Shakespeare phrases! X

5 Shakespeare Phrases

1. "As dead as a doornail"- Henry VI

2. "Eaten out of house and home"- Henry V- part 2

3. "I will wear my heart upon my sleeve"- Othello

4. "In a twinkling of an eye"- The Merchant Of Venice

5. "Mum's the word"- Henry VI- part 2

Friday, 26 October 2012

Henry VII



                                    Henry VII
                                                        
Introduction
        It’s times like these, when the world grows cold that we must remember that each moment we spend on this Earth we must not spend in vain. We must reach out and grab each opportunity with both hands and make the short time we have here the best we can.
        I did not ask for this to happen and for most people these last few days would be painful and hard but I find this experience possibly the most peaceful and calm. The knowledge that the cancer had come back again was no doubt just as painful as the first time I was diagnosed but knowing that I didn't have the fight left in me for another course of treatment made me feel more certain and more in control than ever before and it was then, on the night of my second diagnosis that I started to plan my last 7 days on Earth.   
 Chapter 1- Day 1
         On the first day, God made Heaven and Earth and said “Let there be light!” I watched that light fade away from the small cracked, misty window backstage from the performance of Romeo and Juliet, readying myself for my entrance as Juliet for the balcony scene. It dawned on me that I had never really appreciated the light so much in my life until I had been stuck in this smelly old cupboard at the back of the school’s stage, where you were the luckiest person alive to even receive the slightest ray of light. The light bulbs were all on their last legs and were as much use to me as a lead parachute to a sky diver. But apparently spare maths books that we didn't need were more important than a new light bulb.
        I paced around the tiny room with my crimson dress trailing behind me until my friend Annalise called me “Henry, it’s your turn to come on now. Henry, HENRIETTA!”
“What? Oh OK and don’t call me by my full name, I prefer Henry.” I fixed my wig and left the dirty old cupboard with great relief. I stepped out into the warm glare of the stage lights and onto the somewhat pathetic excuse of a balcony and perfectly recited my lines with the joy and slight distastefulness of a smug gymnast who had just perfectly executed a performance of a professional gymnast with much more experience than herself. Now I faced the trickiest line of the whole play. It was the most famous line from this play and the audience expected it to be said with the vigor of a horse who knew that 15 carrots awaited him if he did what he was told. I cleared my mind and my throat and spoke as loud as I dared. “Romeo, oh Romeo. Where fore out though Romeo. Deny thy father, refuse thy name. Or if though wilt not be but sworn my love and I will no longer be a Capulet.”
        I spaced out as the applause droned on and was contemplating whether to wear my red or blue sash tomorrow. It was then that I remembered how hard I had tried when auditioning for one of the lower roles in this play because the first thing on my bucket list was to take part in a play and when they assigned me the part of Juliet I was overjoyed, maybe this would have changed my career choice to acting or maybe I would have just as quickly as I did now realize that my mum had had a word with the director.                 *      *       *
        After the play I stumbled to my parents’ car and must have dozed off because that was the last thing I could remember from then to the next morning.
Chapter 2- Day 2
        On the second day God said “Let there be sky, land and seas.” And so it was. On the second day of my last week I conquered them all when I flew on an aeroplane to Venice for the first time, from which I drove to the quaint town of Sandon and enjoyed the rest of the day on a gondola ride through the beautiful city of Venice via the canals. But me being only 15, I was accompanied by my ever watchful parents. Even on the gondola ride which was then slightly less peaceful than planned and when we went to my surprisingly close aunt’s house I volunteered to take her dopey old Great Dane, Rover for a walk along the shore. Unfortunately for me, I went a little further into the water than I wanted when Rover decided he wanted a bath. At least I was on my own and not being watched like a piece of meat in the middle of a circle of hungry hyenas.
        Except for those few minor setbacks I really enjoyed my first day in Venice and maybe in another life I will come back. Finally I got back to the house to find everyone in front of the T.V. watching a movie of great distaste so I left them and went to bed.
Chapter 3- Day 3
        On the third day God said “Let the land produce plants and trees” and so it was. On my third day of my last week I stopped to admire each one I passed as they all made Venice so much more beautiful. It seemed that now that I was close to never seeing them again I wanted to save each memory of their existence and their beauty and savor each different and unique scent.
         Admiring the tall oak trees as I passed was no longer something I’d never dream of doing because I felt as though my life was somewhat better and my hardships were nothing compared to the hardships they had been through. It wasn't as if I was ever going to face the full wrath of a storm or become the victim to a murder no one thought twice about. I was free to do what I pleased and this notion made me look at my life with a whole new perspective. I had never before thought of the daffodil as something so amazing or the ivy and the rose bushes so spectacular. I had never before thought about the wonders that are held in a single leaf or petal or thorn and I could never picture this world without them.
        Hundreds of ideas came spiraling into my head as I thought about how different this world would have been without these brilliant plants and trees and then the car stopped and we were at the bottom of a small hill. We trudged up to the top and sat down and each took a deep breath. We didn't say a word. Mum and Dad stood up and turned around. I followed their example and discovered the most breath taking view over the town and over the sea. We named it our spot and I knew that I would never feel more at home anywhere else than at this place.
Chapter 4- Day 4
        On the fourth day God made the sun for the day and the moon and the stars for the night. They were the highlight of my day. I awoke (unusually for me) at sunrise and saw the most magnificent sunrise I could ever hope to see. The amber light shone so brightly with a mixture of crimson and possibly the brightest yellow the world will ever see. The light gleamed in my emerald eyes and made my ordinary and very short mousy brown hair (which had taken a while to grow back) look like a fire pit in the wind. The light brightened my pale skin and made me want to capture it and store it away. My mum came into the room and I shut the window and took one more glance she didn't say a word but took me downstairs to the veranda where Dad was sat with 2 cups of tea. After a while Mum said “I think that was meant for you. You do know how much me and your father love you don’t you? We’ll always support your decisions…………...... now how about we all just stay in today and have today for ourselves.” We watched movies and talked and played games and when the night fell we went back onto the veranda and watched the stars come out. Dad handed me his jacket and we sat down. My aunt Lisa had left us the house for the whole day while she went on a short business trip to another part of Italy but told us that she would be back by tomorrow morning. I missed her already.
Chapter 5- Day 5
        On the fifth day God said “Let the waters be filled with creatures and let the sky also be filled with life.” This was my fourth and last day in Venice. My aunt was back, just like she said and I decided to take Rover on one last walk down to the shore. He bounded along the sand with me being slightly dragged behind him so I decided that I was better off letting him off his lead. As soon as he felt the tension from the lead disappear he ran off, which was fine at fist until he went just out of my view and I had to run after him. After running halfway down the beach I stopped because I saw him in a small rock pool 10 feet away. I walked over to the unsuspecting Great Dane and grabbed his collar before he had the chance to move. I was about to walk away when I saw something move in the water. Then again and again. I saw the silver streak move in and out of the rocks and then there was another and another. I kept on seeing what I suspected to be the same fish until they all darted behind one rock like a fleet of silver submarines they moved as one and disappeared as one. Another movement in the water caught my eye and I watched quietly and curiously as a little crab scuttled up the pebble beach and snatched a  piece of bread left for the birds before hurrying away under a rock. I thought to myself “Well that was interesting.” With a hint of humor and sarcasm I had never noticed before.
        Then after trekking up the beach again for what seemed like an unwanted eternity I finally reached the house and dragged the whining Rover up the steps, into the house and straight into the kitchen before he tried (and failed)to run out the door for the 3rd time this morning. When I went upstairs I noticed that all of our suitcases were packed and on the landing ready to go. Dad came out of one of the bedrooms hauling the last suitcase he whispered “Better go say goodbye to your aunt; she’s really going to miss you.” I nodded and went back downstairs to find that she was already waiting for me I went over and gave her the biggest hug I could possibly give anyone and told her how much I loved her and how much I would miss her.
        She drove us to the airport and our goodbyes seemed to go on for an eternity and by the end of it we all cried because this was the last time we would ever see each other. Our flight was called and we left with nothing but the memory of her and the tears on our faces and the last hug to remember her by. As we sat down on the plane I tried not to think about the painful truth that I would never see her again but focus on the birds in the sky as they soared by without a care or worry or doubt to weigh them down.
Chapter 6- Day 6
        On the 6th day God said “Let the land be filled with animals and let Adam and Eve watch over the world.”And so it was. Today was the most special of all days as everyone I loved and cared about came to see me and said goodbye. Many tears were shed and when the last person left a sort of sudden peace came over me and it seemed that all of the tension and sorrow and pain left me with a single tear. I swept it away and thought of all the wonderful things that had happened in my life.
Chapter 7- Day 7
       On the seventh day God rested and so did I. I stayed in my bed until 12 pm with my Mum and Dad and then we left for the hospital. I was assigned a ward and we sat and talked for a while but then we stayed in silence until the nurse came. My Mum and Dad sat on the bed with me and we talked about anything we could to take our minds off of the dreaded subject.
       It wasn't until late at night that my parents dozed off. I laid awake and watched them peacefully sleeping. I slipped out the pen and paper I had brought with me and wrote everything I thought needed to be said. I wrote about how much I loved them and how much they meant to me and told them about the series of notes I had left around the house for them for after I had gone. Then I slid the note onto the table next where my Mum and Dad were sleeping and then I slept.
     I had battled breast cancer and won but when one of the spores had gotten into my lungs and I couldn't fight it any longer. It feels good to finally be able to rest. My name is Henrietta and that was my story.

Thursday, 11 October 2012

Monday, 24 September 2012

A Hair's Breadth!




I chose this title because the meaning of the saying is a narrow escape which suits the story because Rapunzel only had a short time to escape home when her capture left and the word "hair" links to the title because Rapunzel's hair is what she is known for.

Sunday, 23 September 2012

Quidditch Fouls! X

Rowling writes that there are 700 Quidditch fouls listed in the Department of Magical Games and Sports records
  • Blagging: No player may seize any part of an opponent's broom to slow or hinder the player.
  • Blatching: No player may fly with the intent to collide.
  • Blurting: No player may lock broom handles with the intent to steer an opponent off course.
  • Bumphing: Beaters must not hit Bludgers towards spectators unless the Quaffle is within the scoring area
  • Cobbing: Players must not make excessive use of their elbows against opponents.
  • Flacking: Keepers must not defend the posts from behind by punching Quaffles out of the hoops—goals must be defended from the front.
  • Haversacking: Chasers must not still be in contact with the Quaffle as it passes through a hoop (the Quaffle must be thrown through).
  • Quaffle-pocking: Chasers must not tamper with the Quaffle in any way.
  • Snitchnip: No player other than the Seeker may touch or catch the Golden Snitch.
  • Stooging: No more than one Chaser is allowed in the scoring area at any one time.

Monday, 10 September 2012

Varks results



Visual- 6       Aural- 9

Reading/writing- 7      kinesthetic- 10