Sounds, sights and thoughts
I believe Mark Twain is satirizing 'the long list of names required to address certain nobles' in this excerpt.
Because, there is no mention of balls and dinner parties, or the importance of the Americans/British, or their eccentric attitudes, therefore, the first option is the correct one.
Answer:
Will you or shall you is correct answer of your questions and l hope it helps you
Even though there aren't any underlined words, you can still clearly see that the pronoun used is third person. This is because The narrator is talking about Mr. Phillips, and is not using pronouns like "I" and "we", which would be first person, or "you" and "you're", which would be second person.