Sunday 22 April 2012

Saint George

St George's Day is celebrated on 23rd April each year.It's also a good time to think about one of England's most famous men, William Shakespeare, who was not only born on 23rd April 1564 but also died on 23rd April 1616.


St George (famous for slaying the dragon) is the patron saint of England. He was a Roman soldier who protested against the Roman torture of Christians, and was killed for his beliefs. He is most famous for the story of his fight against the dragon.



Sant Jordi (St George) was named the patron saint of Catalonia in 1456, although he had been venerated here from the eighth century.

For this festival it is traditional to give a rose and a book to one you love. The tradition of giving a rose comes from the medieval custom of celebrating a Rose Fair in Barcelona. April 23rd is the day when William Shakespeare and Miguel de Cervantes, very significant writers, died, both in 1626. So, Spain’s Day of the Book was changed in 1930 from October 7th to this date.

  • On-line activities about Saint George: ESOL Courses.
  • To listen to the story of Saint George and read the text: Storynory.


Parts of the Body


Look at this presentation to learn the parts of the body:


Here you can listen how to say al these parts:


And now is time to practise what you have learned:
  • Would you like to make your own monster? Make a monster with this game while you learn the main body parts.
  • With this online game you are going to match and listening the parts of the body with their picture.
  • In this link you will find a complete list of body parts and three exercises on head, face and the whole body.
  • An online exercise that works a complete vocabulary.
  • 115 exercises of different types to work on body parts.

Saturday 21 April 2012

Thomas Miller


Thomas Miller (31 August 1807 – 24 October 1874), poet and novelist, was born in Gainsborough, the son of George Miller, an unsuccessful wharfinger and ship-owner who deserted his wife and two sons in 1810. Thomas grew up in Sailors Alley, and one of his childhood friends was the future journalist Thomas Cooper. Miller found work as a ploughboy, then as a shoemaker’s apprentice, but was released from his indentures when he threw ‘an iron instrument’ at his vicious and tyrannical master. He was apprenticed as a basket-maker to his stepfather and, when he had done his time, he moved to Nottingham in 1831 to set up his own basket-making business. Here he published his first writings Songs of the Sea Nymphs (1832). Going to London he was befriended by Lady Blessington and Samuel Rogers, and for a time engaged in business as a bookseller, but was unsuccessful and devoted himself exclusively to literature, producing over 40 volumes, including several novels, e.g., Royston Gower (1838), Gideon Giles the Roper, and Rural Sketches. In his stories he successfully delineated rural characters and scenes.

Although he had some success with patronage, he was often in financial need, and appealed directly to Charles Dickens for assistance in 1851. Dickens declined and wrote to his friend Bulwer Lytton of Miller; 'I fear he has mistaken his vocation'.
Miller died at his home at New Street, Kennington, on 24 October.
One of the most representative poems by Miller is 'Evening':

The day is past, the sun is set,

And the white stars are in the sky;
While the long grass with dew is wet,
And through the air the bats now fly.

The lambs have now lain down to sleep,
The birds have long since sought their nests;
The air is still; and dark, and deep
On the hill side the old wood rests.

Yet of the dark I have no fear,
But feel as safe as when 'tis light;
For I know God is with me there,
And He will guard me through the night.

For God is by me when I pray,
And when I close mine eyes to sleep,
I know that He will with me stay,
And will all night watch by me keep.

For He who rules the stars and sea,
Who makes the grass and trees to grow.
Will look on a poor child like me,
When on my knees I to Him bow.

He holds all things in His right hand,
The rich, the poor, the great, the small;
When we sleep, or sit, or stand,
He is with us, for He loves us all.


Sunday 15 April 2012

Charles Dickens

Born into poverty on February 7, 1812, in Portsmouth, England, Charles Dickens left school to work in a factory to support his family. His novels, most published in serial form, attracted a huge following making him one of the first international literary celebrities. His difficult early life led him to crusade for social justice, through his fiction and in life. Charles Dickens died in 1870.



Dickens 2012 is an international celebration of the life and work of Charles Dickens to mark the bicentenary of his birth, which falls on 7 February 2012.


For more information about Charles Dickens, the Dickens 2012, and on-line activities, check these links:


Titanic 100 Years


At 11.40pm on the 14th April 1912 RMS Titanic struck an iceberg in the North Atlantic, near Newfoundland. 
At 12.20am on the 15th April the crew was given the order to send away women and children in the ship’s lifeboats. 
Titanic sank at 2.20am on the 15th April. 

Take a look at a gallery with more than 100 photographs about Titanic by CyArk Media.

Learn some facts about this ship:
Tonnage:46,328 GRT
Displacement:52,310 tons
Length:882 ft 6 in (269.0 m)
Beam:92 ft 0 in (28.0 m)
Height:175 ft (53.3 m) (keel to top of funnels)
Draught:34 ft 7 in (10.5 m)
Depth:64 ft 6 in (19.7 m)
Decks:9 (A–G)
Propulsion:Two 3-blade wing propellers and one 4-blade centre propeller
Speed:Cruising: 21 knots (39 km/h). Max: 24 knots (44 km/h)
Capacity:Passengers: 2,435, crew: 892
Notes:Lifeboats: 20 for 1,178 people

And finally, why don't finish with the main title of the most famous film about the Titanic performed by Celine Dion, My Heart will Go on?




Check this link for the lyrics of this song.