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Situational irony is when an event doesn't turn out as expected. Throughout the story, the reader expects Mr. Mallard to be dead so when he opens the door at the end it is situational irony. The story could still be ironic if he had actually been dead if Mrs. Mallard died at the end. Just when she gets her freedom to live for herself, she dies of a heart attack is situational irony because her death is unexpected in the plot line.
<span>The correct order of events in Ivan Ilyich’s life as depicted in chapters 5–8 of Tolstoy’s "The Death of Ivan Ilyich" is as follows:
1. </span><span>Tiles Ivan Ilyich tries to read a Zola novel while convincing himself that he is healing, but his pain returns worse than ever.
2. </span><span>Ivan Ilyich visits a specialist who tells him that his vermiform appendix is the problem
3. </span><span>Ivan Ilyich tries to use the logic of Caius the mortal to try to make sense of dying but fails.
4. </span><span>Ivan Ilyich tries to distract himself from his death by resuming his professional duties as a judge but fails.
5. </span><span>Ivan Ilyich watches his family leave to go to the theater and finally gains some peace.</span>