26 pages 52 minutes read

O. Henry

The Furnished Room

Fiction | Short Story | Adult | Published in 1904

A modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides that feature detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, quotes, and essay topics.

Literary Devices

Situational and Dramatic Irony

Situational irony (when events in the story are the opposite of what is expected) and dramatic irony (when events in the story are revealed to the reader but not the characters) are key devices in “The Furnished Room” that influence the impact of the narrative on the reader. The situational irony derives from the parallel fates of Eloise and the young man who is searching for her. The protagonist unwittingly rents the same room where Eloise stayed only a week earlier. Furthermore, without ever learning the truth about Eloise, he is overwhelmed by the same despair she experienced and ends his life in exactly the same way.

O. Henry employs dramatic irony at the story’s conclusion when Mrs. Purdy and Mrs. McCool discuss Eloise’s death, and the new inhabitant of her room. While readers are aware that the young man has also killed himself, the women remain oblivious to this fact. The identical fates of the protagonist and Eloise underscore the isolation and anonymity of urban life.

Related Titles

By O. Henry

Study Guide

logo

After Twenty Years

O. Henry

After Twenty Years

O. Henry

Plot Summary

logo

A Municipal Report

O. Henry

A Municipal Report

O. Henry

Study Guide

logo

A Retrieved Reformation

O. Henry

A Retrieved Reformation

O. Henry

Plot Summary

logo

Mammon and the Archer

O. Henry

Mammon and the Archer

O. Henry

Study Guide

logo

One Thousand Dollars

O. Henry

One Thousand Dollars

O. Henry

Study Guide

logo

The Cop and the Anthem

O. Henry

The Cop and the Anthem

O. Henry

Study Guide

logo

The Gift of the Magi

O. Henry

The Gift of the Magi

O. Henry

Study Guide

logo

The Ransom of Red Chief

O. Henry

The Ransom of Red Chief

O. Henry