The irony in the poem is that despite the speaker not understanding the stranger's language, they can still sense the absence of fear in the words spoken. This highlights the power of non-verbal cues and intuition in communication, as fear and emotions can transcend language barriers.
I don't think there has been a case with the fear of irony, from the point of mental conditions yet... but if you're looking for what it would be called, it would be Ironiaophobia i guess... Or if you're looking for irony, look at phobophobia - fear of having a phobia.
The statement "This there is none but he whose being you do fear" uses personification, attributing human qualities to something non-human. It personifies the concept of fear, suggesting that fear is a living being.
Fear of long words (oh the irony).
The verbal irony in Abigail's line "Fear naught. I will save you tomorrow" is in the fact that she is pretending to offer reassurance and protection to the person she is speaking to, but in reality, she is a manipulative character who cannot be trusted. Her words are hollow and deceptive because she is actually using the situation to further her own agenda.
Metaphor for fear: He was a reed in the wind, shaken and bend to the ground.Symbol for fear: ...and the great black cloud mounded up over the horizon, growing ever larger and never stopping.Allusion for fear: and there passed across his face a shadow of uncertainty, in his body a pause and a retraction.Personification for fear: ...and the great huddled dwarf reared its head from the darkness and grinned it carnivorous grimace.Paradox for fear: ...and that great, grim nothing sprouted from itself and fed from its emptiness and grew to a constrictive solidity from its devouring absence.Pun for fear: Scary Iron bearing rock can be termed a FErore.Verbal Irony for fear: 'We have nothing to fear but fear itself.' The irony being that people actually thought this was great oratory.Dramatic Irony for fear: The crown my Prince? The crown for me? My head? My brow? My canopy? Oh what a weighty mound of jewels she be, what a constrictive trap of steel I see.Situational Irony for fear: "My dear! there is a lion in our kitchen." "A lion in our kitchen? What is he doing there?" "Eating chicken fingers."Oxymoron for fear: We have nothing to fear but fear itself. Fear is nothing but an over-reaction.Antithesis for fear: What is fear but an opportunity to over-come fear and to prove yourself master of that which is nothing but ...fear.
situation irony
It is a fear of bald people and it is really strange
weird
Xenophobia is the fear of things that are foreign or strange.
Suspense :)
The term that refers to an intense or irrational fear of a situation or object is "phobia." Phobias can manifest in various forms, such as arachnophobia (fear of spiders) or claustrophobia (fear of confined spaces). These fears often lead individuals to avoid the feared object or situation, impacting their daily lives.
Macroxenoglossophobia is the fear of long, strange words. (Ironic isn't it?)