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Satire In The Importance Of Being Earnest

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“The Importance of Being Earnest” by Oscar Wilde is a satirical playwright set in the late 1800’s during the Victorian era. With some elements of drama and comedy, Wilde illustrates an exaggerated, yet very accurate portrait of the Victorian upper class. He distinguishes the differences and the similarities of the privileged and the not-so-privileged with the help of some irony and a boat-load of puns. From the title alone, you can concur that things are not always what they seem and if something doesn’t seem quite right, it probably isn’t.
Right away the play opens with Algernon playing a careless yet cheerful tune on the piano setting the mood for the rest of the story. This is supposed to symbolize the kind of lives the upper class had in the Victorian era; careless and cheerful. After the conversation between Algernon and his butler, Lane, we can assume that Algernon’s biggest worry in life is that his tea is going to be too hot when he drinks it. Back then, respect was passed down, not earned. You can see this in the way Algernon treats his butler. Although they are on good terms, …show more content…

Jack goes to his house in the country where his niece, Cecily, resides along with her teacher Miss Prism. He puts on an elaborate performance and announces that his “brother” Ernest has died. All of this hits a wall when Algernon shows up under the alias as “Ernest, Jack’s brother.” Wilde creates a sort of cat-and-mouse game here when Gwendolen happens to show up to see her fiancé, Jack (Ernest). After Gwendolen and Cecily are able to converse with one another over some tea and cake, they put two and two together and realize that they have been played; moreover, played in the sense that they are being cheated on. Although this isn’t the case, at this point they believe that there is only one Ernest. This is another example of the carelessness nature of the upper

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