Hello there!
Both authors describe Sir Bedivere's sorrow.
They both have different ways of writing and how the audience gets the main message, but the feelings on both excerpts reflect the sorrow of Sir Bedivere. The way he got lost seeing a point in the middle of nowhere, without thinking, just feeling the pain.
Answer:
The difference between point of view and choice of person in a story is that “point of view” refers to the perspective from which the story is told; “person” is part of a term used to describe a type of narrator (as in first-person or third-person)
Using points of view means that an author chooses one or several characters' perspectives to narrate the events of the story from their own experiences, observations and opinions.
On the other hand, the choice of person is the one that the author uses to narrate the story: first-person, "I or "we"; second-person, "you"; or third-person, "he", "she" or "it").
For instance, George R.R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire has several points of view and all of his characters' storylines are narrated in third-person.
Answer:
I believe the answer you're looking for is C.
Explanation:
Usually when we are writing, the hook is in the introduction. The body paragraphs go topic sentence fact and then evidence 3 times over.