Asked by Lemy
Read the dialogue between Electra and Aegisthus from the beginning of the excerpt.
AEGISTHUS. Where are the strangers then? Enlighten me.
ELECTRA. Yonder. Their hostess entertained them well.
AEGISTHUS. And did they certainly report him dead?
ELECTRA. Not only so. They showed him to our sight.
AEGISTHUS. May this clear evidence be mine to see?
ELECTRA. I envy not the sight that waits you there.
AEGISTHUS. Against their wont thy words have given me joy.
ELECTRA. Much joy be thine, if this be joy to thee!
Which choice best explains how this dialogue creates dramatic irony?
A.
Aegisthus says he wants to see Orestes' body, but he is not prepared for the shock of doing so.
B.
Electra is telling Aegisthus that Orestes is dead, but the audience knows he is alive.
C.
Aegisthus knows that Electra is not being truthful about having seen Orestes' body.
D.
Electra does not know that her suffering will end, but the audience does
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
B
Dramatic irony occurs when the audience knows something a character does not. Here Electra (and Aegisthus) speak as if Orestes is dead, while the audience already knows he is alive—so the characters' reactions (especially Aegisthus’s misplaced joy) are ironic to the audience.
Dramatic irony occurs when the audience knows something a character does not. Here Electra (and Aegisthus) speak as if Orestes is dead, while the audience already knows he is alive—so the characters' reactions (especially Aegisthus’s misplaced joy) are ironic to the audience.
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