In "The Story of an Hour" by Kate Chopin, the doctor's proclamation that Mrs. Mallard has died of "the joy that kills" is ironic, because the reader knows that it is the exact opposite. Mrs. Mallard was actually feeling free and excited about her new life after the death of her husband, and finding that he was still alive was shocking because she was robbed of that new life.
Not yet.
Mrs. Mallard is one of the characters in The Story of an Hour. Mrs. Mallard suffers with heart trouble.
There was an ironic twist in the story.
Hope that helped?
right whale
B."Knowing that Mrs. Mallard was afflicted with a heart trouble, great care was taken to break to her . . . the news of her husband's death."
Starbuck
AHab
Cross the highway
Even though it looked like rain, Carmen didn’t take her umbrella to work.