The irony lies in the fact that the summoner was a corrupt man and that he acted only on his behalf.
We can arrive at this answer because:
- The summoner acted like a Christian and honorable man, but was extremely corrupt.
- He permitted any wrongdoing as long as he got a bottle of wine in return.
- In this case, the summoner allows the forgiveness of people's sins, if they can please him with something.
In this case, the narrator shows that the image of a corrupt summoner is ironic, but more common than it sounds.
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Answer:
look for key words like me i we, for first person then he she they, for 3rd person, itll change how the story is told
The only internal one I ever learned was character versus self.
The others are external:
Character versus fate
Character versus nature
Character versus character
Character versus society