Dramatic irony is when the audience knows something that the characters in a story do not.
irony
The kind of irony in which the audience might witness a crime offstage unseen by any of the characters
nomal grass
The word 'quivers' is the plural form for the noun 'quiver', a common noun, a word for any kind of quiver (an archer's case for holding arrows; or a tremble, a shiver, a trembling movement).A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:Professor William W. Quivers, Physics Dept., Wellesley College, Wellesley, MAQuivers Keep, Chesapeake, VAQuiver Tree Forest Camp, near Keetmanshoop, NamibiaCalifornia Quivers Fruit & Herb Infused Iced Teas"Shudders, Shivers, Quivers & Quakes: A Reader of Horror and Dark Fantasy" an anthology of short works of horror fiction.
There is no specific kind of grass that goats eat, so yes, sheep can eat any kind of grass a goat eats.
Bermuta Grass
grass
It's situational ironySituational irony is the disparity of intention and result: when the result of an action is contrary to the desired or expected effect
I believe it is irony
Rye grass
I believe that it is more likely to be situational irony. Also the reason why the title itself is ironic is because Tolstoy usually likes to end his stories with a sense of shock and aw. More aw than shock, but for example in the end of the story when Pahom successfully returns to the checkpoint he has unfortunately died. When his servant comes to him, he digs him 6 feet of dirt, which is all he needed. Tolstoy's irony is that even though Pahom bought ALL of the land that he did in his past, he really only needed 6 feet for his grave.