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English 19 Online
OpenStudy (anonymous):

G. K. Chesterton uses the story of King Midas to strengthen his claims in the essay "The Fallacy of Success." Which rhetorical device is used in this excerpt from the essay? Unfortunately, however, Midas could fail; he did. His path did not lead unerringly upward. He starved because whenever he touched a biscuit or a ham sandwich it turned to gold. That was the whole point of the story, though the writer has to suppress it delicately, writing so near to a portrait of Lord Rothschild. The old fables of mankind are, indeed, unfathomably wise; but we must not have them expurgated in the intere

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