The irony that is being revealed her is letter "C. The responsibility party is already dead." The death experienced by the person in the irony is such a loss to the speaker and to everyone around him that they rather have alive.
I think the closest answer would be Conflict that arises from misunderstandings and trickery are resolved by the end of the play. The term 'tragedy' would be a terrible downfall that the character brings on his/herself and sometimes other people suffer as well. A tragedy is not bad luck
hope this made sense ;)
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Atticus sets some rules with Jem about the use of his new gun. He doesn't wanting him shooting at birds, but he is sure that Jem will. He explicitly tells him never to shoot a mockingbird, since they are the most innocent of the birds.
That afternoon a mad dog wanders down the street. Calpurnia rushes the children inside and calls Atticus to tell him. Atticus arrives with the town sheriff, Heck Tate. Heck aims for the dog, but realizes that he might miss. He tells Atticus that he should take the shot, to the surprise of the children. Atticus kills the dog instantly. The event greatly affects Jem and he warns Scout not to mention this at school. Scout is confused but Jem tells her that if Atticus wanted them to know what a good shot he was, he would have told them.
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Well...Possibly an infographic, background images about the topic you're talking about...I can't think of anything else, sorry.
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