Beginnings and Endings
First, identify using your
skill and judgement which of the following are opening and which are
closing sentences. They are all taken from real stories, which they indeed
either begin or end!
Secondly, once youve done that, see if you can pair them up so that for
each opening sentence youve chosen a closing sentence to go with it.
The important thing is to be clear as you do this what youre thinking
is when you make your decisions. Be prepared to talk about this!
Here they are:
Today Miss Webster was going
to show them the snowdrops growing in the little three-cornered garden outside
the school-keepers house, where they werent allowed to go.
Shes growing up - and so am I.
She was wide-eyed, and pale in the cold shadow, and he saw the tears run shivering
off her face.
I love you I love you so much oh yes oh yes.
Robert Quick, coming home after a business trip, found a note from his wife.
The year the war began I was in the fifth grade at the Annie F Warren Grammar
School in Winthrop, and that was the winter I won the prize for drawing the
best Civil Defence signs.
And his hands, his acid-marked hands, would reach out to receive it.
After a while they couldnt hear the singing any more, but Miss Webster
continued to cry aloud in the midst of the frightened children.
I thought I knew you as well as I know this house.
Above the old mans head was the dovecote, a tall wire-netted shelf on
stilts, full of strutting, preening birds.
That was the year the war began and the real world, and the difference.
In the old days Hortons Bay was a lumbering town.
Bill selected a sandwich from the lunch basket and walked over to have a look
at the rods.
The pond in our park was circular, exposed, perhaps fifty yards across.