IRONY
Definition of Irony
Irony is a figure of speech in which words are used in such a way that their intended meaning is different from the actual meaning of the words. It may also be a situation that ends up in quite a different way than what is generally anticipated. In simple words, it is a difference between appearance and reality.
Breaking Down the 3 Types of Irony
Verbal Irony | The use of words to mean something different than what they appear to mean. |
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Situational Irony | The difference between what is expected to happen and what actually happens. |
Dramatic Irony | When the audience is more aware of what is happening than a character. |
Irony Examples in Literature
Example #1: Romeo and Juliet (By William Shakespeare)
We come across the following lines in Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet, Act I, Scene V:
“Go ask his name: if he be married.
My grave is like to be my wedding bed.”
Juliet commands her nurse to find out who Romeo was, and says if he were married, then her wedding bed would be her grave. It is a verbal irony because the audience knows that she is going to die on her wedding bed.
Example #2: Julius Caesar (By William Shakespeare)
Shakespeare employs this verbal irony in Julius Caesar, Act I, Scene II:
CASSIUS: ” ‘Tis true this god did shake.”
Cassius, despite knowing the mortal flaws of Caesar, calls him “this god”.
Example #3: Oedipus Rex (By Sophocles)
In the Greek drama Oedipus Rex, written by Sophocles:
“Upon the murderer I invoke this curse – whether he is one man and all unknown,
Or one of many – may he wear out his life in misery to miserable doom!”
The above lines are an illustration of verbal and dramatic irony. It was predicted that a man guilty of killing his father and marrying his own mother brought A curse on the city and its people. In the above-mentioned lines, Oedipus curses the man who is the cause of the curse. He is ignorant of the fact that he himself is that man, and thus he is cursing himself. The audience, on the other hand, knows the situation.
Example #4: The Rime of the Ancient Mariner (By Samuel Coleridge)
Irony examples are not only found in stage plays, but in poems too. In his poem The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, Coleridge wrote:
“Water, water, everywhere,
And all the boards did shrink;
Water, water, everywhere,
Nor any drop to drink.”
In the above-stated lines, the ship – blown by the south wind – is stranded in the uncharted sea. Ironically, there is water everywhere, but they do not have a single drop of drinkable water.
Example #5: The Gift of the Magi (By W.H. Auden)
This is an example of situational irony, in which the wife sells her most prized possession – her hair – to get her husband a Christmas present; and the husband sells his most dear possession – the gold watch – to get his wife a Christmas present. By the end, it is revealed that neither has the utility of the present bought by the other, as both sell their best things to give the other one a gift. Combs, the gift for the wife, is useless because she has sold her hair. The gold watch chain, the gift for the husband, is useless because he has sold the watch to get the combs. The situation becomes ironic for such an incident.
Example #6: Othello (By William Shakespeare)
There are many examples of verbal irony, in which the speaker means the opposite of what he says, in Othello by Shakespeare, as given below:
OTHELLO: “O, thou art wise! ‘Tis certain” (IV.I.87), “Honest Iago . . . ” (V.II.88), (II.III.179) & (I.III.319), “I know, Iago, Thy honesty and love doth mince this matter” (II.III.251-52).
These few lines tell us how Othello uses irony to talk about Iago.
IAGO: “My lord, you know I love you.” (III.III.136)
This shows that Iago only uses this phrase superficially, with quite the opposite meaning.
Example #7: The Tell-Tale Heart (By Edgar Allan Poe)
In the short story The Tell-Tale Heart, by Edgar Allan Poe, there are many instances of irony as given below:
- The murderer poses that he is a wise and intelligent person, who takes each step very carefully to kill the victim. However, the way the old’s man eye prompts him to murder the victim is very ironic. He behaves absolutely insanely throughout the story.
- Another instance of irony in the same story is that the killer himself confesses his crime without being asked by the police. The police are there just to investigate the shriek some neighbor has reported. However, their delayed stay makes the killer very nervous, and he confesses his crime of murder in their presence. He even tells where he has buried the dead body.
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