I think this is what you're asking?
The way the toys speak is ironic because they are toys and shouldn't speak...
The next ironic part is they actually give the toys a life of their own, letting them go on missions to save someone or get something or hide from somebody. It's ironic they would do that when they are just plastic toys.
Dramatic irony is a stylistic literary analysis tool used in movies, theaters, plays, and sometimes in poetry elements , where the audience are more aware of the situations, conflicts, and resolutions that happened and are about to occur compared to the characters involved. This helps add suspense and humor to every plot. But there are instances when dramatic irony isn’t as explicit as it is in the source material. This usually takes place when a famous novel or book proposal is turned into a movie or play, as those who have already read the material know what to expect in the film, and vice versa.
Figurative Language is the stylistic technique employed here.
Explanation:
The poem given here is good example of figurative language as there are many events that are directly or indirectly compared to one another and thus bound seamlessly together to make a beautiful image journey through the lines.
The figurative use of the word wardrobe to open a new world for the person and then their use of imagery to describe their new surroundings is one of the rime and the most clear examples here of that happening.
Tomas Moro's Utopia is a critique to wealth and the value given to pretty much useless things such as gold and silver, which cannot be used to build such as iron and are used for adornment and hoarding purposes only. So B. The Utopians value money less than other, more useful things.
The adjective clause in this sentence is 'who has read thousands of books'. It is an appositive, separated from the rest of the text by commas, and has an adjectival meaning - it modifies the noun, Anthony.