How can you tell that this is part of the story's resolution?
For a distance of fifty yards, at a point about a mile and a half north of Gulch City, the old Livingston trail had to be abandoned. It would have been more labor to repair it than to clear a new path through the brush. And when I left that part of the country two years later, the packers would still turn out of their way for a minute to look at the “Giant Hole,” and to kick up the skull or part of the skeleton of a wolf out of the weeds and brush.
-Adapted from "On a Mountain Trail" by Harry Perry Robinson
Group of answer choices
it leaves unanswered questions in the reader's mind
it explains what happens after the action ends
it increases the level of excitement from the falling action
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In a work of literature, the resolution is the part of the story's plot where the main problem is resolved or worked out. The resolution occurs after the falling action and is typically where the story ends.
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