Answer:
It seems you are analyzing the character Mr. Birling from J.B. Priestley's play An Inspector Calls. Here is one way to fill in the blanks in this analysis:
Mr Birling is obsessed with capitalist ideals. Priestley presents Mr Birling as a proud fool to mock capitalist die-hards in the age of rising socialism in the 20th century. For example, Mr Birling is convinced that ‘we’re in for a time of steady progress’ and that there will 'be no wars'. This is dramatic irony, as Priestley's audience know the Great Depression and two world wars happened after 1912, when the play was set.
The key points are:
Mr Birling represents outdated capitalist ideals
Priestley portrays him as a "proud fool" to critique this
Birling's predictions of "steady progress" and "no wars" are dramatically ironic
The audience knows about the Depression and the World Wars that actually followed 1912
Step-by-step explanation:
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