Katherine Taylor Trice Writing 8D 21 August 2024 Summer Break Eulogy My summer, how you will be missed. I miss you and everything you have brought me. It would be so hard to forget all of the fantastic memories I had with you. Whether it was watching Dance Moms with my mom, having fun at a birthday party, or tubing at the lake, you always brought excitement and enjoyment. I remember long pool days, with the spicy sun beaming down on my face and the cool water brushing my skin. These days led to my hair getting blonder and my skin enhancing tanner. The crispy, crunchy, and stretchy mozzarella sticks were the best snack when I was hungry. They always meet the standards. Thank you, Summer, for the memories with Lili. I only had one more summer …show more content…
My fun moments with her will be with me forever. Gymnastics has been so different without her and even though she is stopping, I hope she enjoys cheering and tumbling as much as she enjoys the other things that make her happy. I hope I will get to see her immense smile and hear her sweet laugh soon. Summer, I won’t forget my 14th birthday! It was such a special day and I’m thrilled that I got to share it with my dad yet again. I remember the soft clap of the pickleball hitting the paddle and the squeak of shoes on the court. Pickleball was such a fun activity to participate in with my family! We talked and laughed together, my family and I. Thank you for the fantastic beach trip! I loved feeling the warm sand slide in between my toes and the salty water refreshing my skin. The water was so glassy and clear. Splashes of water hit our bodies as we played, stunted, and flipped in the water. Ella Cate was so fun to hang out with and I was so excited to see Parker and Charlie again. They were all such amazing people to have around. Ella, Cate and I were soaked one night when we were walking outside. We ran in the rain, shoeless and splashed in the big
Spencer’s were linked by blood to King Charles II. They are also said to be linked by blood to seven American Presidents including Fra... ... middle of paper ... ...eral on television. Her brother, Earl Spencer gave a tearful eulogy for Diana. His closed the eulogy by saying "Above all we give thanks for the life of a woman I am so proud to be able to call my sister, the unique, the complex, the extraordinary and irreplaceable Diana whose beauty, both internal and external, will never be
pain, very much like Caesar after learning of Brutus’ betrayal and the pain that quickly followed. John Green also excellently illustrates pain as a tactic for e... ... middle of paper ... ... drachmas (Currency) to each roman, his gardens and summer-houses, and the place on this of the river Tiber. Although the story of Julius Caesar was tragic because of his certain death, there was a great amount of enlightenment met. Caesar demonstrated through pain, realization, and effect that he was enlightened
philanthropists. Roosevelt seemed to look up his father and all that he has accomplished .Theodore Roosevelt’s chi... ... middle of paper ... ...t had lodged in his heart. In true Roosevelt fashion was buried in Oyster Bay in a quite manner with no eulogy (Mackintosh). Works Cited Cellania, Miss. "Ten Reasons Why Teddy Roosevelt Is the Coolest President Ever." Mental Floss. Mental Floss, 7 Aug. 2007. Web. 22 May 2014. Freidel, Frank, and Hugh Sidey. "Theodore Roosevelt." The White House
Eulogy for Mother My mother was a complex, multi-faceted person. Many of you here today knew my mother personally, and many of you knew my mother indirectly through one of her family members. You may have known her as a coworker, a friend, or a support person. Of course, all of my mother’s family here today each knew a part of her, a “facet” of her--as a mother, a sister, an aunt, a grandmother, a cousin. I, of course, knew my mother as a mother. As I have reached adulthood and become a mother
Overcoming the death of a loved one can be one of life's most difficult tasks, especially when that loss involves a parent or a child. Author and abolitionist Harriet Beecher Stowe grieved over death as both mother and child. When she was only five years old, her mother Roxana Foote Beecher, died of tuberculosis. Later at age 38, she lost her infant son Charley to an outbreak of cholera. Together these two traumatic events amplified her condemnation of slavery and ultimately influenced the