Source URL: http://room-iv.wikispaces.com/Narrative+essays 
Saylor URL: www.saylor.org/courses/K12ELA007#1.7.1  
 
Attributed to: Kimbrough ELA  www.saylor.org 
  Page 1 of 1 
Examples of narrative essays 
 
The Rescue   
 
      Everything had been totally different that Sunday morning, when the two boys had set out on their walk 
up the cool, pine-scented mountainside  near  the  village  where  they  lived.  Near  the  top,  Peter and  Michael  had 
climbed onto a rock to admire the view of the valley far below them.  
      That was when disaster had struck. On clambering down, Peter had tumbled awkwardly to the ground, his 
leg  bent  at  a  painful  angle  beneath  him.  Unable  to  move,  he  was  forced  to wait where he was, wrapped in 
Michael’s jacket, while Michael had begun the long trek down the mountainside to fetch help. 
     Michael  looked  down  on  the  mountainside  from  the  window  of  the  helicopter.  He  felt  increasingly 
helpless, as it looked totally different from the air and the network of tiny paths was mostly obscured from view 
by the thick covering of pine trees. To make matters worse, the light was fading fast and a thick blanket of mist 
was starting to form. Eventually the pilot and the three mountain rescue workers in the helicopter agreed that they 
would have to go back and continue the search for Michael'’ friend, Peter, on foot. 
     By seven o’clock that evening, they had left the helicopter in the village and gathered a mountain rescue 
team  of  fifteen  men.  Michael  felt  disheartened  and  scared  for  his  friend’s  safety.  Slowly  they  ascended  the 
mountain, scouring the numerous paths for Peter. The only sounds were crunching footsteps and the crackle of 
static on the walkie-talkies that the rescue workers carried to talk to each other. The mountainside was an eerie 
place after nightfall and gradually Michael started to wonder whether they would ever find Peter at all. 
  Suddenly Michael heard a voice come over one of the walkie-talkies, “We’ve got him. We’re taking him down.”  
  “I’m sorry,” said Michael to his friend later in the warm safety of the hospital room, “I didn’t realise it would 
take so long.” 
     The  doctors  decided  to  keep  Peter  at  the  hospital  for  the  night  in  case  of  complications  with  his  leg. 
Before leaving, Michael looked down at his friend and patted his shoulder as, silently, they both vowed never to 
go walking in the mountains again. 
 
What’s too much is too much! 
 
    I  just  knew  I  shouldn’t  have  gone  out  that  Friday  afternoon.  I’d  had  a  strange  feeling  all  morning,  a 
feeling that something was going to happen, but I told myself, “Don’t be afraid, Ida, you and your funny feelings! 
– pull yourself together and go and get the groceries.” So I did, and you’ll never guess what happened!  
OR : 
     You know how someone feels when he is about to pay for his grocery shopping and finds his wallet is 
almost  empty.  Mumbling  a  poor  excuse  I  headed  for  the  bank,  not  prepared  at  all  for  what  I  was  about  to 
experience there. 
     I was waiting patiently in the queue when suddenly two men pulling black masks over their heads, rushed 
through  the  front  door  and  began  shouting  and  waving  guns  in  the  air.  “This  is  a  robbery,”  yelled  one  of  the 
masked men. “Do as we say and no one will get hurt!”  The other bank robber herded us into a corner of the room 
and ordered us to lie face-down on the floor. 
    I was terrified. My whole body froze in fear. Someone helped me down to the ground where all the other 
customers were huddled together, hardly even daring to breathe in case the men decided to carry out their threat 
and start shooting. 
    The cashiers were remarkably calm but I suppose their training had prepared them for such a situation. 
They busily emptied the contents of their tills into a bag the robbers had pushed over the counter to them. I kept 
expecting to hear the wailing of sirens as the police hurried to rescue us, but there was only an unbearable silence. 
     Almost as suddenly as they had entered, the masked raiders grabbed their bag and left the building, 
jumping into a beige getaway car. Minutes later, the police arrived. Several officers took off in their cars to see if 
they could catch the criminals, while others tried to calm us down enough so that they could take coherent 
statements.