Table of Contents
- 1 What is an example of a metaphor in The Ransom of Red Chief?
- 2 What is an example of hyperbole in The Ransom of Red Chief?
- 3 What are some examples of dialect in The Ransom of Red Chief?
- 4 What is ironic or unexpected about The Ransom of Red Chief?
- 5 What is an example of allusion in The Ransom of Red Chief?
- 6 Why is The Ransom of Red Chief ironic?
- 7 How does dialect work in the ransom of Red Chief?
- 8 Which is an example of irony in the ransom of Red Chief?
- 9 How is summit a metaphor in the ransom of Red Chief?
What is an example of a metaphor in The Ransom of Red Chief?
Wolves Have Borne Away the Tender Lambkin (Metaphor) Sam says, “Perhaps it has not yet been discovered that the wolves have borne away the tender lambkin from the fold.” In this metaphor, Sam likens himself and Bill to wolves and Johnny to a lamb they have stolen.
What is an example of hyperbole in The Ransom of Red Chief?
There was a lot of exaggeration in the Ransom of Red Chief. Some examples are when Bill says Johnny rode him 90 miles like a horse. Another example is when Bill says “In ten minutes I’ll shall cross the Central, Southern, and Middle Western States and be legging it trippingly for the Canadian border.”
What are examples of irony in Ransom of Red Chief?
The greatest example of irony of situation is the failure of the ransom note to produce the intended results. Instead Ebenezer Dorset replies that he is willing to take his son back if the “two desperate men” will pay him two hundred and fifty dollars and bring the boy in the dark.
What are some examples of dialect in The Ransom of Red Chief?
Henry uses dialect to give Bill and Sam a stereotypical down south “good ol’ boy” characterization. “You’re a liar!” says Bill. “You’re afraid. You was to be burned at sunrise, and you was afraid he’d do it.
What is ironic or unexpected about The Ransom of Red Chief?
The Ransom of Red Chief by O. Henry is filled with irony as a plan to kidnap and boy and hold him for ransom goes terribly wrong. This occurs when instead of getting a ransom for Red Chief, Bill and Sam end up paying the boy’s father for taking him back.
How is hyperbole used in The Ransom of Red Chief?
“Just then, I heard a heavy sound and a deep breath from Bill. A rock the size of an egg had hit him just behind his left ear.” (pg 3/3)This story is about kidnappers that need a little extra cash for an illegal land deal.
What is an example of allusion in The Ransom of Red Chief?
An example of one allusion in “Ransom of Red Chief” is “By Geronimo! choose a child of a well-to-do citizen to kidnap for ransom.
Why is The Ransom of Red Chief ironic?
What does heaven help the Wolves mean?
No one in the town is looking for the boy, and the kid is basically like kidnapping the kidnappers. Why does the narrator say, “heaven, help the wolves” because the kidnappers and the wolves in this situation. Why is the letter signed :two desperate men? to show the kids dad that they will do anything to get the money.
How does dialect work in the ransom of Red Chief?
Without doubt, the use of dialect and figurative language which at times gravitates toward hyperbole contributes greatly to the comic reversals and ironic tone as readers are easily able to imagine the action and compromising positions the perpetrators of the kidnapping find themselves in.
Which is an example of irony in the ransom of Red Chief?
For example, in “The Ransom of Red Chief,” the child who is kidnapped is more dangerous than his kidnappers. O. Henry was famous for ironic word play in his stories. Early in “The Ransom of Red Chief,” the setting is established as the small town of Summit, which is “as flat as a flannel-cake.”
Why are Bill and Me Tight in the ransom of Red Chief?
Further, the use of “tight” and the description of the religious hypocrisy of the father who will “melt down” for the ransom indicate that “Bill and me” are not sophisticated criminals. Nevertheless, such crude descriptions are often very funny. For instance, Sam wakes to hear Bill:
How is summit a metaphor in the ransom of Red Chief?
At the beginning of the story, Sam describes how he and Bill came to stage their kidnapping in an Alabaman town called Summit, which he says is “as flat as a flannel-cake.” In this simile, Sam underlines the flat terrain of the town by likening it to a flannel cake, a type of sugar-free pancake.