The correct answer is D. First person means using the word I
The answer you are looking for is a
In "Lines Composed a Few Miles About Tintern Abbey (1798), Wordsworth evaluates his relationship with nature and the memories he had, contrasting how this relationship was in the past and how it is now.
In line 36 he mentions another gift that comes with age. This marks the passing of time and how he has matured. When he was a young boy, nature and the psysichal and material joy of it made all his world. The mountains, rivers and streams marked his passions and love. Now an old man, even if he cannot resume that relationship, he does not mourn because with age he has acquired a different relationship, more sublime in a spiritual way. He can now hear oftentimes "The still, sad music of humanity" and guard the heart of his moral being.
The differences that are made visible in the outsiders, is that the greasers are considered the filth of the earth and the socials (or socs) are made to be the all high and mighty people to be. the story shows you just how different to cliques can be, and how different you may be from everyone else. Johnny used to be thought as this little good for nothing boy and then later turned out to be a hero in both a wrong (offing that one soc) and a good (saving those kids in the burning building) way.