Writing Challenge: Write a six-word story

We're living, adding more each day.

Travel through time - but only forwards.

See, now that would never have worked in Latin...

Sure, it can. "Veni, vidi, scripsi" - I came, I saw, I wrote. ;)

(OK, the Romans didn't have a regular postal system, and this quote doesn't have the nice alliteration we're used to. But you can't have everything). :)
 
Oh, well, if we're doing that:

I clicked, I saw, I came. (clicki, vidi, veni)

How you wish to interpret that is entirely up to you.
 
Or, perhaps more story-ish:
"He never saw the streetcar coming."

And thus, Churchill was nearly killed.

(True story: in 1931, Churchill visited New York, didn't look both ways before crossing the street, and was knocked down by a taxicab. :eek: He survived (obviously). But what if he didn't? Then Britain would've been led by Lord Halifax in 1940, and might have stayed out of WW2 -- since Halifax, in real life, was willing to explore a negotiated peace with Hitler in 1940. (To give Halifax his due, once war was declared, his desire for peace was overridden by his distrust of Hitler, and he gave Churchill his full support).

And that's another reason to look both ways: if you do, you might save Western Europe). ;)
 
And thus, Churchill was nearly killed.

(True story: in 1931, Churchill visited New York, didn't look both ways before crossing the street, and was knocked down by a taxicab. :eek: He survived (obviously). But what if he didn't? Then Britain would've been led by Lord Halifax in 1940, and might have stayed out of WW2 -- since Halifax, in real life, was willing to explore a negotiated peace with Hitler in 1940. (To give Halifax his due, once war was declared, his desire for peace was overridden by his distrust of Hitler, and he gave Churchill his full support).

And that's another reason to look both ways: if you do, you might save Western Europe). ;)

You know, if a story needs to be explained, then there's something missing in it. Stories should be complete in themselves, or provide enough context for the reader to go away and look it up. Otherwise, you're actually using up more words than the form allows.

That's why Hemingway's classic story is a story - "Baby shoes for sale. Never worn." - it provides an entire implied backstory that a reader can pick up through intuition, as well as subtext in what is essentially the conclusion.
 
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