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June
2004
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'04 |
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The
Romans Invade England
By Annabel Plumeridge, age 11, from Upper Boddington
Fear.
Fear was the only possible word to describe how I felt. I was standing
over the white cliffs, stone still as I watched petrified. The magnificent
Roman warships broke their way through the powerful waves. I felt
my heart miss a beat as the leader of our tribe came forth. We knew
the signal.
Then Caesar came to the bow of the ship. His eyes seemed to flash
and glitter with savage laughter. My mouth was dry and I could see
that my friends were terrified. The signal went and a wave of arrows
from the Roman War ship came down on top of us. I saw my friends
fall from the cliffs down below. I could hear more arrows whistling
past me as I made my way down to shore.
Invading
Britain
I was
clearing out my house, when something caught the corner of my eye.
I slowly lifted it from where it lay and gently blew away the thick
black layer of dust. Underneath I found my Roman helmet all battered
and scarred from the deadly battles I fought. Then I remembered.
The calk white cliffs seemed to grow as we broke our way through
the powerful waves. Our enemy was in clear sight. The oars stopped
and we came to a grinding halt a few meters back from the pebbled
beach. I froze with fear as Caesar stepped out onto the bow of the
ship. Then the signal went. It took all my might as I through myself
over the ship into the pounding waves. The water was streaming into
my shoes weighing me down. I was dragged back underneath the waves
as I desperately tried to wade my way to shore, as the enemies pounded
towards us. The British cries made shivers run down my spine, but
I knew what I had to do so I kept my courage. I fired my arrows
as the British men scrambled down the cliff side, hitting them hard
in the neck and arms, watching them tumble onto the stone beach
lying there silent. The loud cries of orders came from the ships
and we scrambled on board weak and breathless, but it was not over!
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