Answer:
This is the chronological order of the story:
1. Elya looks for Zeroni
2. Elya court’s Myra
3. Elya forgets his promise
4. Stanley is bullied
5. Stanley finds sneakers
6. Stanley is arrested
7. Stanley gets to camp
8. Stanley digs a hole.
Explanation:
<span>The lines <span>from the poem “Kubla Khan” by Samuel Taylor
Coleridge affect the overall tone by being mystical. The words used are related
to mysterious events, characters, and places. All of these three are described
in an artistic manner of using meaningful adjectives.</span></span>
<span>A stone wall separates the speaker’s property from his neighbor’s. In spring, the two meet to walk the wall and jointly make repairs. The speaker sees no reason for the wall to be kept—there are no cows to be contained, just apple and pine trees. He does not believe in walls for the sake of walls. The neighbor resorts to an old adage: “Good fences make good neighbors.” The speaker remains unconvinced and mischievously presses the neighbor to look beyond the old-fashioned folly of such reasoning. His neighbor will not be swayed. The speaker envisions his neighbor as a holdover from a justifiably outmoded era, a living example of a dark-age mentality. But the neighbor simply repeats the adage.</span>
Answer:
Under Freytag's pyramid, the plot of a story consists of five parts:
Exposition (originally called introduction)
Rising action (rise)
Climax.
Falling action (return or fall)
Catastrophe, denouement, resolution, or revelation.