It wearies by the constant strain after effect, its mock-heroics and allusive periphrasis, and excites distrust by its want of moderation.
Answer:
You're getting more imaginative.
In the arts (and in business), there's a classic theory that the best things happen at the convergence of disciplines. You develop immunity to the "paradox of expertise" when you have a large knowledge base, where your advanced knowledge of one area clouds your ability to see new ideas.
Explanation:
A. between the rising action and the climax
reason of this is because the rising action mean that something sparked something else and now there is going to be a problem. The problem comes at the climax when you are facing the problem. Think of a movie like avengers, rising action was when Loki wanted to kill his brother Thor so he got frost giants to kill citizens of New York just to get his brothers attention. Climax is when they are fighting each other- hence facing the problem.
As a writer and reader I disagree with this. Perhaps if you are writing for a scientific journal or business report, long blocks of text can seem like you have a lot of info. Generally speaking, especially in fiction and non fiction i think unbroken pages of text will best case scenario bore a reader, worst case scenraio burden and overwhelm them with a lot of info so the feel daunted about continuing.