English, asked by anmolsk111pdp7rg, 1 year ago

Bring out the irony in the poem "Ozimadias"

Answers

Answered by aryan78243
0
the irony of the poem is this that the king Ozymandias got many Statues constructed to immortalized himself but neither he himself was paid for his statues as the time elapsed he grows old and finally died similarly all this statues what terribly broken people soon forget him and his memories was thrown into Oblivion
l think it's help you please mark me as brainiest
Answered by MissAlison
1

\huge\sf\underline{\pink{AnsWeR}}

In Percy Bysshe Shelleys poem Ozymandias, there is an overriding irony presented to show the difference between the sculptor and the sculpture.

The poem’s irony revolves around Ozymandias himself. The great irony here was having the pharaoh narrate the poem, boasting of all his greatness and power, yet all that he has ‘established’ now lies in ruins, crumbling through time, slowly joining the surrounding sands.

Ozymandias was so full of authority, even though there was nothing left of what he boasts. His kingdom and his glory now lie in the sands with only stone slabs.

Similar questions