Answer:
Explanation:
Many literary devices fall under the category of "figure of speech," which previous Educators have identified in preceding answers. This answer will call attention to those figures of speech in "If" which are commonly understood maxims or scenarios in English-speaking culture. There are indeed certain tropes which we turn to time and again to make meaningful comparisons to real life phenomena.
The narrator could become repetitive, start rambling, making hasty generalizations, crazy assumptions.
Explanation:
is a Word, Morphem, Phrase
I believe the answer is <span>Even in that time, there was a lower, middle, and upper class of society.
</span>
Take a look at this part of the excerpt
. . . <span> that these things were all either too far above me or too far below me; that mine was the middle state, or what might be called the upper station of low life. . .
the character acknowledge that there is three classes in his current society, upper, middle , and lower and he currently belong to the middle classes.</span>
It means that he had never been in love until he saw the beauty of the girl whom he fell for then