What Is The Irony In The Cranes

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“The Cranes” Endeavors in true love and everlasting life are near obsolete in today’s trifling morals and blinded society. “The Cranes” by Peter Meikne explicates the concept of a pair’s rare love by symbolizing graceful whooping cranes. The specific breed is rare, becoming extinct, and mate for life, which portrays the couple’s relationship effortlessly. The author presents intriguing details and circumstances that reveal unusual events through dialogue, foreshadowing, and irony. The couple’s dialogue throughout the story adds a greater sense of suspense while involving the reader directly in their conversation. It is inferred that the two lovers were in their later days and very ill. “How old am I anyways, 130?” and “I can’t smoke, can’t drink martinis, no coffee, no candy,” both indirectly characterize the husband as elderly and sick. His wife has a cough and tends to refer to her children, indicating her age. Foreshadowing elements unveil that the couple is yearning to end their life. Meikne includes that there is a shower curtain in the front seat and a gun wrapped in a plaid towel. Although it is not said how their death occurred, it can be established that the husband …show more content…
The birds were beautiful, elegant, lovely, but they also carried much weight on their shoulders. The couple lived a fairytale life and thrived by “until death do us part”. The wife agonizes that her children will not settle as her and her husband did because of the generation they live in. The two cranes were surprised at “the shot”, states the author in the last sentence. The shot implicates the husband killing himself. It specifically declares that only two birds were frightened by the gun shot, and “their great wings great wings and slender necks pointed like arrows towards the sun” renders the couple spending eternity in

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