This question is incomplete. Here's the complete question.
Read 'Hearts and Hands', by William Sydney Porter
Which statement best describes the situational irony of the ending of the story?
A)- The reader doesn't expect to learn that Easton is the counterfeiter.
B). The reader expects Easton to ask to visit Miss Fairchild, and he doesn't
C)- Miss Fairchild expects Easton to ask her to join him out West, and he doesn't.
D). The reader doesn't expect other passengers to be listening to Miss Fairchild's conversation.
Answer: A)- The reader doesn't expect to learn that Easton is the counterfeiter.
Explanation:
When Miss Fairchild recognizes Mr. Easton as one of the two men handcuffed to each other on the train, she, and the reader, are led to believe that Mr. Easton is a United States marshall on his way to take the man he´s handcuffed to into prison. However, when Mr. Easton and his companion leave, two passengers talk about the conversation that had taken place with Miss Fairchild. Based on how Mr. Easton and his companion were handcuffed, they come to the conclusion that Mr. Easton was actually the prisoner and not the Marshall.
Answer: D. Young's results were published and fell into the hands of a talented linguist, Jean-Francois Champolion.
Explanation: The evidence from "The Rosetta Stone" that supports the claim that Thomas Young played a key role in helping to decipher the hieroglyphs on the Rosetta Stone is <u><em>Young's results were published and fell into the hands of a talented linguist, Jean-Francois Champollion</em></u>. Young correctly deciphered that the royal name of Ptolemy was in the repeated hieroglyphs. But it was Champollion who cracked the code and sound and pictures worked together.