What Is The Irony In The Masque Of The Red Death

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Part 1 – I hope it is okay that I chose to briefly cover two rather than just one.
In Poe’s “Masque of the Red Death” the colors and objects in the rooms represented stages of life. For example, two obvious colors were blue, which could stand for birth, and black, which may have stood for death. According to Bell, the blue color could be reasonably associated with a beginning or the beginning of life. It was hard to determine who was the narrator but after finishing the story and reading it again I can only assume the narrator, in my opinion, was the Red Death itself because in the very end of the story Red Death is the only one that has survived to tell the tale and states that he “held illimitable dominion over all” (Poe 323). Also in the last paragraph the character of Red Death was as if it were proud and boastful of itself.
“The Ambitious Guest” in short is a story of a family in woods who allows a stranger into their home and they all die in an Avalanche. One instance of irony in this story would be “But I cannot die till I have achieved my destiny”. The irony in this is the visitor has no idea he was about to die shortly and will never achieve his destiny. The second is “were I to vanish from the earth tomorrow none would know so much of me as you”. Again, he says this and he as well as all the others are about to
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In Longfellow’s poem “My Lost Youth” there is an overall theme of a man remembering his childhood, the relationships, painting the scenes of the people he saw and a war he observed. Several stanzas are descriptive of his memories. For example, in the fifth stanza he describes the harbor in town “I remember the black wharves and the slips, and the sea-tides tossing free ;”( Longfellow 15). He even talks about the Spanish sailors that came to port. He remembers a war “I remember the sea-fight far away, How it thundered o’er the tide!”, ( Longfellow