Exposition - Walter is day dreaming that he is on a plane headed into a hurricane when his wife
wakes him because he is going to fast.
Conflict - Walter isn't entertained enough by everyday life to keep focused and not daydream. This worries his wife and frustrates people around him.
Rising Action - Walter has a series of daydreams that show the reader what he desires to be but is not in real life.
Climax - Mrs. Mitty wakes walter out of his day dream at the hotel, and for the first time in the whole book other than day dreams where Walter speaks for himself say, "Does it ever occur to you that I am sometimes thinking?
Falling Action - Mrs. Mitty tells Walter to wait at the hotel because she forgot something, which is a little ironic because she has been nagging him about forgeting things the whole story.
Resolution - In Walter's final day dream he is bravely standing in front of a firing squad say his is undeafted to the end
wakes him because he is going to fast.
Conflict - Walter isn't entertained enough by everyday life to keep focused and not daydream. This worries his wife and frustrates people around him.
Rising Action - Walter has a series of daydreams that show the reader what he desires to be but is not in real life.
Climax - Mrs. Mitty wakes walter out of his day dream at the hotel, and for the first time in the whole book other than day dreams where Walter speaks for himself say, "Does it ever occur to you that I am sometimes thinking?
Falling Action - Mrs. Mitty tells Walter to wait at the hotel because she forgot something, which is a little ironic because she has been nagging him about forgeting things the whole story.
Resolution - In Walter's final day dream he is bravely standing in front of a firing squad say his is undeafted to the end
By: Jacob Muehlher