B because the narrator might see it as what he believes in so he could be putting his opinion into it not letting the character in the book believe anything else
The correct answer is the last one: "This passage is ironic because Aunt Julie hopes Hedda's child will bring new life to the Tesman house, but does not know that Hedda's suicide will soon make it a house of death."
In this play by Henrik Ibsen, Miss Tessman saw Hedda as the figure that would continue the family lineage - even talking about "the house of life" - but actually, by committing suicide she is responsible for ending the lineage.
This kind of literary irony is called situational irony, when there is incongruence between expectations of something to happen and what actually happens in the end.
Answer:
Please don't post irrelevant questions
what the heck u mean, I'm so confused