For this weekend's homework, i had to read the Wasp's Nest by Agatha Christie. Like you, i had a similar question. I think, in the end, John Harrison was going to kill himself because he only had a short time to live ( due to his health condition ), and he did not like Langton, so, he was going to take the poison Langton was going to use to kill the wasps nest, then put it in his drink so it would look like Langton tried to kill him. In the end, the detective and Harrison talk about how he figured out his plan.
In Agatha Christie's play "The Wasp's Nest," the climax occurs when the killer is revealed during the final confrontation. The falling action involves the resolution of the mystery as the characters come to terms with the consequences of the revelation.
Marina Rudd commits suicide. Miss Marple figures out that Marina murdered Heather Babcock for giving her German measles when she was pregnant. Marina's child was born with mental retardation. Marina also murdered Ella because she correctly guessed Marina was the killer.
"The Wasps Nest" is a short story written by Agatha Christie. The theme of the story is fear. It was adapted for a television series.
The resolution is generally after the falling action and climax.
the rising action is what takes you to the climax of the story and the falling actions is what is after the climax.
the climax comes first then falling action followed by the resolution
A. falling action
The falling action takes place after the climax. This is when the story begins to die down and there is less action. The story is almost resolved at this point.
The falling action
There is no falling action the story simply ends at the Climax!
The resolution or falling action in a story occurs after the climax. It normally provides an explanation for the climax. It provides closure.
The 'falling action' comes after the climax in a story.
The 'falling action' comes after the climax in a story.
Exposition, Rising Action, Climax, Falling Action, Resolution/Conclusion
exposition, rising action, climax, falling action, conclusion