What  Thorne  valued  was  the  freedom  to  continue  doing  whatever  he wished, without restraint. With the official slave trade gone, it seemed a
likely  bet  that  the  queen  would  turn  her  attention  to  the  black  market next. Traffic in weapons, narcotics, children . . . the new queen was not
the Regent, she’d proved that already; she cared about the low as well as the  great.  That  was  why  Thorne  had  decreed  that  she  had  to  go.
Johansen, 2014: 334
The  statement  above explains  in  detail  that  Kelsea’s  ways  in  ruling  is
different with Thomas Regent. It triggers Thorne’s hatred. Kelsea prefers the right
of the people. Kelseas way of ruling is based on the moral value of humanity and justice, while Thomas Regent and Arlen Thorne prefer to do things based on their
own pleasure. Kelsea’s  wisdom  is  also  revealed  when  Kelsea  holds  a  hearing  in  the
Hall. At the hearing, Kelsea feels something is missing. She does not see the poor and the lower class people. She notices  that most people who  attend the  hearing
are the nobles. She decides to change that. She gives the right for anyone to come to the audience, regardless of their class.
As she went up the aisle, many in the crowd gave her disgusted glances, but Kelsea was unimpressed; they’d likely behaved no better during the
last  invasion.  As  on  the  day  of  her  crowning,  there  were  no  poor  here. She would have to change that. Next week when she held audience, she
would  tell  Mace  to  throw  the  doors  open  to  the  first  few  hundred  who came. Johansen, 2014: 379
The  last  evidence  that  the  writer  can  collect  is  when  Kelsea  is  chasing Thorne.  When
Kelsea successfully attacks and destroys Thorne’s entourage, her guards  manage  to  capture  one  of  the  traitors.  The  traitor  is  Javel,  one  of  the
Keep ’s gatekeepers. Thorne asks Javel to join his entourage because he promises
that Javel will get his wife back after he successfully does this shipment. Javel ’s
wife is sent many years ago in one of the shipments, but Javel lately realizes that what he is doing is wrong. Finally he decides to destroy the cage when Kelsea and
his entourage attack. Kelsea  nodded,  knowing  this  was  true.  But  out  of  the  blur  of  the  night,
which  now  seemed  centuries  ago,  her  mind  suddenly  dug  up  a  vivid picture:  this  man,  an  axe  in  his  hand,  swingly  wildly  at  the  bars  of  the
cage.
– “Take him back to the Keep and put him in a cell.”  Johansen, 2014: 456
When  the  attack  is  over,  Javel  is  arrested  by  the  Queen ’s Guards. They
demand to punish Javel at the moment. Yet Kelsea refuses because she knows and sees what Javel does that night. Kelsea sees Javel tries to dismantle the cage that
night.  As  a  wise  person,  Kelsea  gives  Javel  imprisonment,  not  a  death  penalty. Kelsea  decides  to  imprison  Javel  because  what  he  does  for  freeing  the  people  is
right. She is not giving him a death penalty for helping Thorne’s illegal shipment.
From  all  the  quotations  and  the  detailed  explanations  above,  the  writer considers  that  Kelsea  has  a
wise
characteristic.  She  has  an  open-minded  tought that  she  uses  for  every  decision  she  makes.  She  puts  aside  her  own  ego.  As  a
queen, she rules based on the need of her people which is based on the perspective of humanity and justice. It is a proof that Kelsea is able to be the True Queen of
The Tearling. PLAGIAT MERUPAKAN TINDAKAN TIDAK TERPUJI
B. The  Conflicts  Faced  by  Kelsea  Before  and  After  Being  a  Queen  of
Tearling
After knowing the characteristics of Kelsea, the writer tries to reveal the problems  that  Kelsea  faces  before  and  after  being  Queen.  In  this  section,  the
writer  focuses  on  the  conflics  faced  by  Kelsea.  The  writer  describes  that  Kelsea faces internal and external conflicts.
1. Internal Conflicts
As stated  by Stanton in
Introduction to Fiction
, internal conflict is when a character is struggling against herself to decide her decision 1965: 16. In this
section,  the  writer  elaborates  some  evidences  to  strengthen  the  internal  conflicts faced  by  Kelsea.  The  writer  finds  that  that  Kelsea  faced  most  of  her  internal
conflicts before she becomes a queen. The first internal conflict faced by Kelsea is when she has a dilemma for
leaving  her  foster  parents  or  staying  with  them.  She  needs  to  leave  her  foster parents, Barty and Carlin to reclaim her throne in Tearling Kingdom. On the other
hand, she does not want to leave her foster parents. She feels guilty if she leaves them alone. They are too old for living in the cottage in the middle of the woods.
But if Kelsea chooses to stay with them, Tearling’s situation will get even worse. The  people  will  suffer  because  of  the  slavery  that  is  still  going  on.  In  the  end,
Kelsea chooses to leave her foster parents and take the responsibility that has been waiting for her for so long.
Barty  and  Carlin  stepped  back,  and  Barty  picked  up  the  last  pieces  of Kelsea’s baggage. They both looked terribly old. Kelsea did not want to
leave  them  there,  these  two  people  who’d  raised  her  and  taught  her everything  she  knew.  The  irrational  side  of  her  mine  briefly  considered
dropping her luggage and simply bolting out the back door, a bright and tempting fantasy that lasted two seconds before it faded Johansen, 2014:
22. The  next  internal  conflict  that  is  faced  by  Kelsea  is  when  she  has  a
dilemma  on  her  way  back  to  Tearling.  She  is  lost  in  her  thought.  Kelsea  is  still unsure about what she will do when she becomes a Queen later in Tearling. She
feels that she is so small, like she is just nothing for Tearling. On the other hand, her mind says that she needs to brace herself to take the responsibility because she
is no longer a little girl. It is her destiny to rule the Tearling. She decides to take the risk in ruling the Tearling. She wants to rule the Tearling and free the people
from slavery. She also wants to end the slavery to give back the rights of people of Tearling to live their life properly.
Good words, and Kelsea saw their wisdom even more now. But she had no idea what todo. How was she to command anyone?
I’m nineteen. I’m
not supposed to be frightened anymore.
Johansen, 2014: 30 The next conflict is when she arrives and faces a complicated situation on
the  Keep’s  Yard.  She  has  a  dilemma  to  do  what  is  right  for  Tearling’s  people. Kelsea wants to burn the slave cages and ends the Mort Treaty. If she does that, it
will  endanger  her  people,  because  The  Mortmesne  will  do  an  invasion  to Tearling. On the other side, if Kelsea does not burn the cages and end the Treaty,
her  people  will  be  sent  as  slaves  for  Mortmesne  and  it  will  keep  the  suffering PLAGIAT MERUPAKAN TINDAKAN TIDAK TERPUJI
much longer. She is confused for a while. She is debating with herself, which way is better for Tearling. She faces a hard situation, because both decisions have their
own risks. In the end, Kelsea decides to burn the cages and end the slavery for her people’s rights and life.
She hesitated , then took he torch and rode toward the nearest cage. The crowd  and  her  gurads  shifted  like  a  single  great  organis  to  allow  her
access... ..but before she could throw it, her eye happened on one of the two cages
built  for  children.  The  fire  inside  her  chest  reignited,  spreading  heat across  her  skin.
Everything I’ve
done  so  far  can  be  undone.  But  if  I  do
this, there’s no going back. Johansen, 2014: 157-158 Kelsea is aware about what she did. She shows her courage by ending the
Mort Treaty and dealing with Mortmesne Invasion. She does that for good of her people.  Her  people  have  been  suffering  from  this  slavery  for  so  long  and  she
decides to end the slavery.
2. External Conflicts
After the writer discusses the internal conflicts that are faced by Kelsea, the  writer  discusses
Kelsea’s  external  conflicts.  Kelsea  faces  several  external conflicts with the other characters in the story. External conflict itself is a conflict
when the main character, the protagonist, is having different ideas with the other characters.  As  what  Stanton  said  in
Introduction  to  Fiction
1965,  external conflict is indicated when a character against hisher surrounding environment. A
main  character  has  to  deal  with  different  thought  of  hisher  surroundings.  This conflict  can  be  seen  as  a  main  character  argues  with  another  character,  society,
etc. The argument lasts  because they have two different opinions and objectives. PLAGIAT MERUPAKAN TINDAKAN TIDAK TERPUJI
Most  of  the  conflicts  that  Kelsea  faced  is  about  trying  to  save  the  people  of Tearling from the danger that they will face.
The type of conflict that Kelsea face is a struggle against another person. It  is  stated  by  Holman  and  Harmon  in
A  Handbook  to  Literature
1986:107,  a struggle against another person is a conflict when a character has to face the other
characters  either  physically,  mentally,  or  thought.  In  this  section,  Kelsea encounters  with  other  characters  in  the  novel
The  Queen  of  the  Tearling
are elaborated. Kelsea faces many different ideas and desires with other characters of
the story.
a. Kelsea’s Conflict againts Pen.
There are some external conflicts that Kelsea faces in this story . The first external conflict is between Kelsea and Pen
, the member of the Queen’s Guards. The  conflict  between  Kelsea  and  Pen  happens  before  Kelsea  becomes  the  queen
of Tearling. This conflict happens when Pen is going to build Kelsea’s tent in the
forest, but Kelsea wants to do it by herself. She takes every tool that she can find on the saddlebags. She wants to show him that she can do thing by herself.
Kelsea  feels  ashamed  at  the  moment.  She  does  not  know  what  she  is doing with the tools that she has. She thinks that she does not need any help for
building a tent. Pen explains that it is really necessary to build the tent with two or more people so that it will not give the person a hard time for making it.  Kelsea
realizes that it will not be that hard to build the tent and it will be wise for her to let Pen helps her in the beginning.  In the end, Kelsea gives up and let Pen helps
her  to  build  the  tent.  She  feels  sorry  for  herself  for  being  stubborn  and  childish. The point of this conflict is that Kelsea needs to be wise onn making her deicision.
She  notice  the  youngest  guard  pulling  the  making  of  her  tent  from  his saddlebags.  “i’ll  do  it’’  she  called  and  strode  accross  the  clearing,
holding  out  her  hand  for  some  tool,  perhaps  some  weapon,  she  didn’t care which. She’d never felt more useless.
The guard handled her a flat- headed mallet and remarked, “The tent does
require two people, Highness. May I help you?” “Of course,” Kelsea replied, pleased. Johansen, 2014: 40
b. Kelsea’s Conflict against Arlen Thorne
The  next  external  conflict  is  associated  with  one  of  the  prominent antagonists in the story. This conflict happens between Kelsea and Arlen Thorne,
the Census Burea’s leader. This conflict happens because Kelsea has a different ideas with Thorne on the slave lottery.
Kelsea  arrives  at  the  Keep  and  finds  an  unexpected  situation  that  is complicated enough  for  her. She sees  the people of Tearling are queuing for the
slave shipment. Kelsea wants to stop the shipment of the slave so that the people will  not  suffer  any  longer,  but  Thorne  prevents  her  from  stopping  the  shipment
because it will violate the Mort Treaty which has been maintained for years. Mort Treaty  is  a  peace  agreement  with  Mortmesne  Kingdom.  This  treaty  was  signed
long  time  ago  when  Mortmesne  invades  Tearling  to  conquer  the  New  World. Although Mort Treaty has been done for many  years, Kelsea sees the treaty as  a
major trouble in Tearling. She does not want her people to be sent to Mortmesne as  slaves.  Thorne  wants  to  keep  the  treaty  because  it  is  his  job  that  he  has  for  a