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Summary Of Tracy Chevalier's 'Falling Angels'

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The social classing system is like a ladder. It is much easier to get down than to get up. 'Falling Angels' by Tracy Chevalier explores the idea of a gravedigger who wishes to go up the social classing system. The story presents the idea of the persona wishing to get to a higher social class, having a conversation with his boss, and the dangers lower class people have to face.To convey these ideas, Chevalier has used diction, imagery, metaphor, and colloquialism to convey the idea that working hard will get someone up the social classing arrangement. Right at the outset of the passage, the author has expressed the idea that the persona is less respected than his father. Chevalier has used diction to state that the persona is stuck in "grave" and needs to put a lot of effort in to get to the "top of the hole." Chevalier has used the word grave to portray the idea that the persona is stuck in the pit of the social classing system and the author has used "top of the hole" to indicate the persona's goal of living a higher life. The phrase 'high wall' is also used to express that the persona is currently trapped and can not live a …show more content…

Chevalier has used colloquialism to express the persona's lack of education and has mostly used monosyllabic words to express the persona's limited variety of vocabulary he knows. Chevalier has used diction to state that the persona believes that "learning does not feed me [him]." This is stated because of the lack of academic skill which is required for the persona's occupation. The author has also used diction to express the way the persona's boss treats. He states that the persona is nothing but "a servant of the London Cemetery Company." This can be interpreted that the persona's boss mistreats him and his job stating that he has no potential in life, underpaid and has to laborious

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