Historical Change – (The Great Depression)
Entry #1 – “Stories shall be told” – Ballad
The new deal has brought new hope
But remembering those dust bowl days
When the sand and storms were tyrants
Rampaging the villages and leaving people with a haze
Wooden planks hammered onto the windows and doors
Yet outside the sand like snow, piled and flew
They couldn’t seal their homes enough
Past the door the ruthless sand rushed through
Drought stuck the plains hard
Storms robbing them of their homes
Wounded with nothing left
Farmers packed and began to roam
People were struck down hard
Pulled under and lying bare and cold
Some didn’t have the strength to climb up
But long after these stories shall be told
Entry #2 – “Sand Rage” – Cinquain
Dust Bowl
Drought and sand storms
Rampaged through the Great Plains
Homes wrecked with farmers nothing left
Destroyed
Hunger
Shattered windows
Sand storm whirls and crashes
Struck with poverty and blindness
Despair
Expository Afterword
The topic I am writing about is the Dust Bowl. It was part of the period of the Great Depression. The Dust Bowl was the name given to an area of the Great Plains that was struck by nearly a decade of drought and soil erosions. Huge sand storms that rampaged the area made farming impossible. Dust storms destroyed everything in their paths, leaving the farmers without their crops. Without green grasses to eat, cattle starved and were sold. Many farmers couldn’t feed themselves and were in high debt. Their houses were taken away, leaving many homeless and unemployed. People wore masks and put sheets over their windows, but buckets of dust still got inside their homes. Short on oxygen, people could barely breathe. Outside, the dust piled up like snow, burying cars and homes. Children and the elderly sometimes died from their exposure to dust storms. During the Great Depression, millions of people were out of work across the United States. Unable to find another job in their own area, many unemployed people traveled from place to place, hoping to find some work. When there was a job opening, there were often a thousand people applying for the same job. The Great depression lasted for almost over a decade, and it was finally the start of the U.S. entering into World War II that ended the Great Depression in the United States.
Teacher Comments:
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Historical Change –
New Deal vs new deal. Days and haze feels a bit forced. Homes and roam feels forced, too. In this poem, I think you could try to personify the sand.
This set of cinquains does a better job of explaining and expressing the emotion.