comment on the irony employed in the story hearts and hands . How does the sting in the tail make the story interesting?
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Answer:
In ''Hearts and Hands,'' a lady, Miss Fairchild, detects an old companion named Mr. Easton on a train cuffed to another man. That man calls her companion Mr. Marshal when she sees the sleeves. Turns out, the man is really the marshal, and Mr. Easton is the prisoner. The marshal simply needs to spare them both from humiliation.
In ''Hearts and Hands,'' a lady, Miss Fairchild, detects an old companion named Mr. Easton on a train cuffed to another man. That man calls her companion Mr. Marshal when she sees the sleeves. Turns out, the man is really the marshal, and Mr. Easton is the prisoner. The marshal simply needs to spare them both from humiliation.It takes next to no data for Miss Fairchild to trust that the one individual on the mentor who she knows is a respectable man. Maybe she relates her own class and respectability with her old companion, or maybe she is extremely artless. She doesn't reconsider to scrutinize the expression of the harsh looking man to whom her companion, Mr. Easton, is cuffed.