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How Does Puck Use Dramatic Irony In A Midsummer Night's Dream

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Shakespeare’s “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” is filled with dramatic irony, that is, situations in which the audience has knowledge of the characters’ lives/situations that the characters do not. Puck is the source of much of the dramatic irony in the play, as he often performs actions on the players that the audience is privy to, but that the players themselves are unaware of….Puck creates many situations of dramatic irony, in which the audience witnesses the reality of the forces that act on the characters of the play, though the characters are ignorant of these forces. Puck narrates his actions throughout the play, though he does not address the audience directly until his final speech. His narration, often expressed as speech directed toward
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