Answer:
This question is incomplete, but I will still give you an explanation of the themes Young Goodman Brown is about.
Explanation:
The story<em> Young Goodman Brown</em> by Nathaniel Hawthorne has as their main themes faith, religion, sins and good versus evil.
Brown's faith is easily corrupted by the Devil in the woods. In turn, he feels guilty when he knows what he is going to do and says goodbye to his beloved wife, whom he considers a very good and religious woman.
There is also a criticism of the Puritan religion and you can see how all the Puritans in the story "hid something" since they were all present that night in the forest. All of them had been tempted by evil.
This is where good versus evil comes into play, as not even the purest people in the city could be considered good.
I think it’s A I’m not sure :(
Answer:
<u>He later served as the army's Commanding officer in Berlin, Germany, where his headquarters had formerly been occupied by the very Nazi leaders who had put his family in the camp and killed many of his family members.</u>
Explanation:
Irony is when what happened is not something that is expected. This means that the expected outcome of anything is so far from what actually happened, surprising the people.
Here, the word "delicious" is added to modify the 'irony'. By adding the word "delicious", the speaker seems to suggest the fact that the irony is something that both surprises yet makes him happy or even excited about it. And the "delicious irony" in the passage is <em>"his headquarters (in Berlin, Germany) had formerly been occupied by the very Nazi leaders who had put his family in the camp and killed many of his family members." </em>This ironic outcome seems to be both cathartic and painful for him.