Bowmanville High School - Screech Owl Yearbook (Bowmanville, Ontario Canada)

 - Class of 1972

Page 94 of 200

 

Bowmanville High School - Screech Owl Yearbook (Bowmanville, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 94 of 200
Page 94 of 200



Bowmanville High School - Screech Owl Yearbook (Bowmanville, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 93
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Page 94 text:

Alone Alone is an isolated desk at the front of a class when everyone else is at the back. Alone is the empty library with just you and musty books. Alone is walking down Lover's Lane in the rain. Alone is Christmas with only a bare, dead pine tree. Alone is no parents. Alone is fighting a false reputation. Alone is an unwed mother. Alone is being black when everyone else is white. Alone is dying in Viet-Nam. Anonymous Grade 9 f67 2nd Prize Prose Running I've done it! I'm free! They nearly got me today. Every day it gets harder and harder to run. I've got to find a hiding place, one where I can rest for an hour or two between the chases. They keep getting bigger and stronger each day but I'm just falling apart. I don't know how long I can keep up this pace. Now I'm exhausted but soon I'll be sleeping. How beautiful sleep is! It's serenity and peace are all- enveloping. The tranquillity of slumber provides a temporary release of my tensions. My mind and soul alike seem to be floating in a sea of something . . . something more than peace, something much, much more and total. I'l1 be dreaming of a place where they can't get me anymore. It seems to be an oasis . . . an escape, a door with peace on the other side. Will I possibly be free at long last? Totally free? Forever? No wait! Something is always pulling at me, something dragging me back to the contest. The piercing sound of the dutiful alarm drags me back. Oh God! Not again! I hope in heaven's name that I won't have yet another day of reckoning. And yet, as I stand in despair, I see people laughing at me as they would laugh at a fool. Why? Why? But I'll have no time to think, for they will be on my tail again. Is this all there is to life ? Is it nothing but running from one's mistakes? Chris Jones 2E

Page 93 text:

Grandmother There sat grandmother giggling, humming and tittering away to her- self. She was singing a rhyme she had once taught us children years ago. The time released many memories that had become buried under a rubble of more important things. I remembered her good night kiss which had protected me from day through dark and I wondered why I had abandoned its magic for grown-up values. Mischievous memory had blurred these visions and replaced them with that sombre lady I had left in the autumn. For some reason I had always pictured grand- mother knitting, reading the Bible and sleeping. They were right: she had changed. Her hair was snow white, now, and the sunlight from the morning sky caused a warm glow to embrace her. I drew nearer and caressed her hand- much softer than I had remembered. She smiled and her eyes smiled, but not at me. Her at- tention was focused on the corn husk doll. Clay fingers gripped my spine and a sharp pain plunged into my heart. My desperate glance asked shy? - but the rest of the family had the same look in their eyes. I stepped out of the room with my sister and she blurted out the details of the accident. It had happened just after the last snowstorm. The following day had been fresh and bright. There had even been a rainbow in the sky. The neighbouring children had swept off our pond and were skating on nature's glass. I recalled how exciting skating was when I was a boy. I could hear the songs, the laughter and see the coloured scarfs flash by. I reached out to touch them and- then I remembered- grandmother! Her thoughts had been there too as she watched us through the closed window. Sister had stopped talking, she realized I was not following her. I turned and met her distressed look. She continued. Grandmother had found my old skates in the basement that day and before anyone had noticed, she was gone. Her footsteps cut through the heavy snow towards the clear ice. She had been skating in a circle with the local youths when the family spotted her. Before Jenny reached the pond grandmother had fallen through the ice. Thank God the water only came up to her ankles-- but that was enough. Sister sobbed, The old soul has lost her senses. I re-entered the room and one by one, heads turned as if to say, We believe it too. This upset me more than grandmother's illness. The sun was higher in the sky and its beams danced on the mirrbr. It was an old mirror, the wooden frame was hand carved and compared to the glit- tered frames of the family portraits on the mantle, it harboured a mellow warmth. Yes, the mirror was unique. Grandmother suddenly burst out laughing. I went to her and smiled. Her hand touched my cheek, and on kneeling, she kissed me. In answer to my puzzled look, her eyes grew big, her wrinkles faded away and she raised her head, staring into the looking glass. I knew what she had found. Dennis Francis 5B



Page 95 text:

3rd Prize Prose Life and Death There she was, small but not so small. She was on her feet already and only a few hours old, a filly, with four tiny hooves, and a dapple grey colour. Already I could see in her bone structure that she was going to be a big and muscular horse. Just like her mother there was a big broad chest, and shoulders, enormous hind-quarters, and strong slender legs. Good qualities for a fine hunter. She had so many qualities from her mother it was difficult to find her father's but his were there, the tiny head, small and delicate ears and her colouring. She found her mother's soft warm udder and began to suck greedily on her milk. The mother nuzzled her baby closer to her side and nickered softly. After she had finished feeding, the little one collapsed tiredly into the clean dry straw. All of this event is still quite vivid in my mind, and it seems only yesterday that she was still a baby. It's hard to believe she died last night out in the pasture after bringing another life into this world. Barbara McGuey 3C The Wonders of a Lamb Be If you were 'asked To give advice, In one word, I'm sure I'd find These answers clear. Live, I'm one of a flock, Love, Yet my master knows my name, Learn, Though often I may wander Think, His love is always the same. Give, Laugh, If I lie in green pasture, TTY- I'll learn there to trust, But I've found a word . For I can do nothing, That one word is MBE . But keep still---I must. It takes in, In the turmoil of life, As I seek for my rest, By still quiet waters, He gives me the best. Linda Ferrill 2A The way of Life, The feeling of Love, The skill of Learn, The time of Think, The treasure of Give, The joy of Laugh, The energy of Try, Now don't you agree? That the word is BE , One last thought, I wish we all could B E Brenda Moffatt 2A

Suggestions in the Bowmanville High School - Screech Owl Yearbook (Bowmanville, Ontario Canada) collection:

Bowmanville High School - Screech Owl Yearbook (Bowmanville, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 37

1972, pg 37

Bowmanville High School - Screech Owl Yearbook (Bowmanville, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 50

1972, pg 50

Bowmanville High School - Screech Owl Yearbook (Bowmanville, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 95

1972, pg 95

Bowmanville High School - Screech Owl Yearbook (Bowmanville, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 183

1972, pg 183

Bowmanville High School - Screech Owl Yearbook (Bowmanville, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 60

1972, pg 60

Bowmanville High School - Screech Owl Yearbook (Bowmanville, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 136

1972, pg 136

1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
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