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Saturday, January 19, 2019

The Dusk

Nor art object Gortsby sits on a park bench at dusk, a time when, in his estimation, individuals who have experienced defeat in their lives can sojourn unrecognized. An elderly gentleman sits followings to Gortsby, and Gortsby judges him to be a lonely person of no consequence. After a short time, the grizzly man leaves, and his place is taken by a younger man, crack dressed than his predecessor but equally downcast. The man tells Gortsby a wistful tommyrot of having gone out to buy about soap, then not having been able to find his hotel.Gortsby responds that he had once done the same thing, simply in a abroad country, to which the man rejoins that in a foreign land, one could go to the Consul for help, but here at home, there is no help to be had, unless some decent chap would believe his study and lend him some money. Gortsby says he will lend the man some money if he can produce the soap as conclusion that his accounting is true, but the man cannot, and walks away.Looki ng on the ground, Gortsby spies a new shut out of soap, goes after the man, and lends him the money. When he returns to the park bench, however, the elderly gentleman who was sitting next to him originally is searching the ground for a lost bar of soap. deuce elements of humor that the author uses in this story are comic mockery and satire. Comic irony occurs when the reader knows something that a character does not, and in this story is evidenced when the young man drolly ends his sad tale with a hide request for mone.The man obviously has told his story to make Gortsby feel execrable for him and lend him some money, but Gortsby does not know for sure that his story is a lie. Satire is the use of humor to expose a military man frailty. Gortsbys inability to judge his counterparts correctly is comically pointed out in his implicit chagrin when he discovers that, through his own miscalculation, he has allowed the young man to outwit him with his sad story of woe.

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