Connect, Challenge, Conflict, Conquer, and Conclude are the five elements to make a compelling story.
In the Importance of Being Ernest, Cecily's response when "Ernest" asks is she will marry him is the first one: She says yes because they're already engaged.
"Ernest" actually is surprised to find out that Cecily thinks they are already engaged to be married and not only that, but she reveals that her sustained fascination with "uncle's Jack brother" had moved her to invent a romance between herself and Ernest.
Cecily had created an entire relationship with love letters included (that she herself had written), a ring, a broken engagement, and a reconciliation. All chronically told in her personal diary.
A conflict in literature is defined as any struggle between opposing forces. Usually, the main character struggles against some other force. This type ofconflict is what drives each and every story. Without it, the story would have no point or purpose.
an internal conflict would be man vs. self meaning someone is struggling with an internal idea or thought
external could be man vs nature, man vs society, man vs man etc. these are all people vs outside forces
this is the first piece, i will add more once i have poems and stories to choose from
Gloomy. The way which the character describes his cell makes it seem like a dark and gloomy place. He said they gave him a blanket and a toilet and thats it, the bars are rusty, the cell was crumbled. The guard even smiled at him as if he was enjoying putting him in there.
Hope this helped. Have a great day!
In William Shakespeare's "Sonnet 18," the line best paraphrases to but your youth will never fade.
In "Sonnet 18" Shakespeare tries to compare a fair maiden to a summer's day, but he expresses that there is nothing that compares to her because her perpetual beauty and youth are far greater than such a temporary, inconsistent season.
So, when Shakespeare writes <span>"<span>But thy eternal summer shall not fade,</span>" he is saying that her timeless youth will never fade, unlike the briefness of a summer's day.</span>