Ski Trip 2023
So after an uneventful journey to Falcade in Italy we arrive and Mr Harris immediately slips on the ice in a comical cartoon leg flailing way. Luckily no one was harmed and after...
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So after an uneventful journey to Falcade in Italy we arrive and Mr Harris immediately slips on the ice in a comical cartoon leg flailing way. Luckily no one was harmed and after...
Posted by Morag Waring
I am excited to announce that the University of Hertfordshire is offering a fully funded summer school program designed to inspire Year 10 students to consider a career in...
Posted by Mo Abusef
The article below was written by Imogen Woodroofe- 11 Beech. Thank you. Sons, husbands, fathers and brothers all men who got sent to war. All wars. Jane Weir was a writer who...
Posted by Natasha Collins
I am pleased to report that our KS4 and KS5 students have successfully completed their PPEs (Pre-Public Exams) in the last two weeks and have performed exceptionally well in terms...
Posted by Mo Abusef
Posted by Danielle Bowe
Just before the February half term, we celebrated the creative arts here at BMS which you can read about more extensively in Miss. Dolan’s article in last week’s...
Posted by Lee Cox
Posted by Maryam Razavi
I am excited to announce that the University of Hertfordshire is offering a fully funded summer school program designed to inspire Year 10 students from black or mixed ethnic...
Posted by Mo Abusef
As we move closer towards examination season, the Year 13 law class are beginning to focus upon revision and honing key skills that have been learnt and refined over the course. ...
Posted by Stephanie Knowles
Reading ‘Noughts and Crosses’ in our English lessons was an enjoyable and enriching experience. The storyline and plot is carefully crafted in such a way that the readers...
Posted by Anthony Carter
The article below was written by Imogen Woodroofe- 11 Beech. Thank you.
Sons, husbands, fathers and brothers all men who got sent to war. All wars. Jane Weir was a writer who liked to bring light to this and the women who got left at home grieving, alone and uneducated about the actual effects of war and what was really happening.
Jane Weir is a writer, textile designer and mother who is most famous for writing poppies, a poem that we study in gcse poetry. Jane Weir wrote the poem Poppies in response to Carol Ann Duffy’s plea for more people to write poems about the young British soldiers who have died in wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Unlike the majority of poets in the power and conflict anthology Jane wrote her poem from the mothers point of view on war.
Although writing a poem from an outsider’s view on war, Jane so clearly explains the emotions and feelings the mother of this young soldier is going through. She makes it unbelievably clear that the mother doesn’t understand the full extend of war, when she wrote the whole poem as an extended metaphor mainly symbolising how she sends her son to war the same way she sent him to his first day of school: getting his uniform laid out and ready for him to put on and grazing her nose against his before he leaves. All very childlike things to do with a young man, soldier and future hero.
Unfortunately , we get the impression that the soldier never comes home because he died at war fighting for his country and Jane didn’t disappoint with the way she wrote the ending of the poem never once did she say the soldier died but it made us desperate to know what happened to the solder and how the mother coped with the overwhelming amount of grief we left her feeling.
Perhaps Jane Weir did such a great job of representing this mother’s grief because all she had to do was think about one of her sons going off to war and being killed for her to somewhat understand how heartbroken and hollow you would feel.
Imogen woodroofe, 11 Beech
Last month, the English Faculty launched a themed Lockdown Poetry Competition. Mr Johnson and Miss Stanton set students the challenge to compose and submit a poem about an aspect...