The Bird of Life and Death

In Mayan culture, each person had an animal companion. Although most leaders’ animal was the leopard, because it symbolizes strength and power, my animal is the opposite. I chose the vulture as my companion. These birds are disgusting scavengers, who wait for an animal to die and then eat the corpse, instead of loathsome predators, who must kill other animals for their food. There are many types of these nasty creatures, but the Turkey Vulture is my favorite. This vulture variant is most common in North America and the United States and has a bald, red-colored head with two large nostrils. Ugly. Gruesome. Massive. Vultures are sickly savage scavengers. Because these birds are grotesque, many people are frightened of them. They don’t have to work for their meals, since they feed on roadkill and rotting carcasses. Therefore, they have a carefree life compared to other birds, who either have to hunt other animals or have to worry about being hunted. Vultures are common in almost every continent, excluding Australia, Oceania, and Antarctica. In Mayan times and still to this day, my animal companion, the vulture, symbolized the cycle of life and death, which is why I chose it.

The Dark Ages

By Zeke 
January 27, 2021 

A Viking Raid of England in 793.

When people think of the Middle Ages, it is often thought of as a magnificent time of tenacious knights, intrepid kings, and massive castles. However, it was an era filled with war and destruction for Europe. The Middle Ages started with the collapse of the Western Roman Empire in the late 5th century. All the stunned Romans could do was flee as the ferocious tribes of barbarians desecrated their once great structures. Knights and castles did not even come about until the late 900s, and even then most people were dressed with poorly made rags, and lived in fetid, dilapidated shacks working day and night for the wealthy noblemen. By then all of the glorious art and education from the Roman Empire had been long forgotten, and the Dark Ages had begun.

The Bloody Massacre

October 4, 2021
By Zeke

The British Soldiers killed five colonial citizens.

It was a bitterly cold March evening in 1770 in Boston, Massachusetts. A mob of mad colonists started to form as British Private Hugh White nervously surveyed the streets. The colonists, who were known as Patriots, resented the Redcoats who had occupied their city. 

A Group of Patriots insulted mockingly taunted Private White. They also insulted a British officer, daring him to fire his gun. White insisted that the Patriots be respectful to the officer. When the Colonists refused, White who had grown extremely angry, hit a Patriot on the head with the butt of his musket. Enraged by this, the Patriots pressed in on the soldiers.

More Redcoats showed up and increased in their rage and their numbers. The Patriots insolently threw sticks, stones, and large chunks of ice at the British. Soon, a soldier was hit with a rock, causing his gun to fire. The Soldiers, who were now outnumbered, panicked, and they fired a volley of bullets into the angry mob. Many Colonists were hit, and five were killed. It was clear that more trouble would follow this Bloody Massacre.