The reason that it appeals to the audience is because they want to find out more about them. Let’s say there was a generic character you wouldn’t want to know about them. The more complex your character is that more intriguing they are.
Answer:
Honesty, motivation, and ability to respond.
Explanation:
Answer:
<h3><em>doubtful</em></h3><h3><em>indefinite</em></h3><h3><em>uncertain</em></h3><h3><em>unsure</em></h3><h3><em>doubting</em></h3><h3><em>dubious</em></h3><h3><em>faltering</em></h3><h3><em>hesitant</em></h3><h3>
Explanation:</h3><h3><em>questionable</em></h3><h3><em>unconfident</em></h3><h3><em>undecided</em></h3><h3><em>unfixed</em></h3><h3><em>unpredictable</em></h3><h3><em>unreliable</em></h3>
To help, I wrote an example of the poem prompt you gave(Images -- should read from left to right) In the example, I used irony to show contrast and contradictory from the speaker's tone and veiw at the begining of the poem compared to at the end of the poem. I tried to incorporate a story into the poem because I figured out a good way to tell a--what is a rather mediocre--story with the given prompt. I incorporated this story into the poem simply by sticking to an ABB rhyme scheme throughout the entire thing. There are of course an endless number of ways one could write a poem, for poetry is often seen as more of a creative, expressive form of writing rather than a technical one. If you have an idea and you can manage to formulate it in stanzas, there's not much that can go wrong.