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Desiree's Baby Literary Analysis

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Desiree's Baby: Irony

In the beginning of Desiree's Baby, Armand and Desiree were living in pure bliss. "Oh, Armand is the proudest father in the parish, I believe chiefly because it is a boy, to bear his name, though he says not—that he would have loved a girl as well." Since the day he fell in love with her, there were very few frowns seen upon his face. In "Desiree's Baby", irony is a huge part in the story. Desiree's husband, Armand, believes that Desiree had an affair and made the family impure, cursed them with the brand of slavery, and messed up the families white bloodline.

It was at the moment when the little quadroon boy was fanning Desiree's baby that she realized that her baby depicted similarities of the quadroon boy. When Armand walked into the room she cried, "Look at our child. What does it mean? Armand said, "It means that the child is not white." When Armand states this, the reader receives the message that he believes Desiree has broken their vows by sleeping with a black man. This can back by the way the atmosphere has been between …show more content…

"He no longer loved her, because of the unconscious injury she had brought upon his home and his name." With the information that Armand has, he believes that Desiree rightfully knew she was of black race and deliberately wanted to ruin his name. After her leaving, he spent the remainder of the day burning all of Desiree's and his baby's belongings. He began searching through drawers where he found a tiny bundle of letters from Desiree. To his surprise, at the back of the drawer he found a letter from his mother to his father. One in which left him speechless. The letter read, "But, above all, I thank God for having so arranged our lives that our dear Armand will never know that his mother, who adores him, belongs to the race that is cursed with the brand of

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