contestada

Is the narrator of the story limited or omniscient? At what point in the story do readers learn whose thoughts and feelings the narrator can describe?

Respuesta :

The utilization of an omniscient third-individual storyteller empowers Chopin to recount a total story that is not constrained to the hero's perspective. This is key in light of the fact that the opening of the story starts with us perusers knowing something Mrs. Mallard doesn't, and on the grounds that the story closes after Mrs. Mallard has as of now passed on.

question : which three thoughts and feelings do we learn about the narrator ?

Answer : b, c, e