Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. That Awkward Age By Roger McGough Viking £12.99. O Lord, let me be a burden on my children For long they've been a burden on me. May they fetch and carry, clean and scrub And do so cheerfully.

  2. Author: Roger McGough Illustrator: Michael Broad. Publisher: Barrington Stoke. Interest age: 7-12. Reading age: 7. A hilarious tale about two young boys getting up to mischief and into scrapes in latter-day Liverpool, by the award-winning poet, playwright and author, Roger McGough.

  3. 11 de ago. de 2017 · Roger McGough: the man who brought poetry down from the shelf and on to the streets 'Imagination is more important than information. If you’re being bullied at school, you can imagine your ...

  4. 1 de ene. de 1983 · Sky in the Pie. "Waiter, there's a sky in my pie!" Roger McGough has many intriguing poems for his readers to taste - some to choke with laughter about, some to chew very slowly. Brimming with vitality and humour and spiced with thoughtful observation, this live-wire collection will appeal to every young reader.

  5. Summary ”]‘First Day At School’ by Roger McGough is about a child’s experiences on their first day of school. The poem starts with the child speaking hyperbolically about how long they’ve been at school and how far from home they are. The child also emphasizes the size of other children, those who are older and have a better understanding of their environment.

  6. Roger McGough, poet, playwright, children’s writer and broadcaster, was awarded an OBE for services to poetry in 1997 and a CBE in 2004. He is the President of the Poetry Society. McGough has written over 50 books; his latest poetry collection is As Far as I Know (Penguin, 2013). The Mersey Sound (Penguin, 1967), the anthology that ...

  7. On #WorldPoetryDay, Roger McGough tells of the inspiration for his touching and tragic poem The Identification - an interview with a bereaved father on BBC News in 1972. Seeing the footage for the first time in over 50 years, Roger reflects: "It touched me, as it touched millions.