In "It's Only Fair,” the point of view is D. third-person omniscient.
<h3>What is a Point of View?</h3>
This refers to the perspective or viewpoint that a person has about a particular narration.
Hence, we can see that from the given text, <em>It's Only Fair</em>, the point of view that is used is the third person omniscient where the thoughts and feelings of each character is shown.
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Yes your sentence is correct but you have add "in" in place of within
that Swift's rhetorical
style persuades the reader to detest the speaker and pity the Irish. Swift's
specific strategy is twofold, using a "trap" to create sympathy for the Irish and a
dislike of the narrator who, in the span of one sentence, "details vividly
and with rhetorical emphasis the grinding poverty" but feels emotion
solely for members of his own class.Swift's use of gripping details of
poverty and his narrator's cool approach towards them create "two opposing
points of view" that "alienate the reader, perhaps unconsciously,
from a narrator who can view with 'melancholy' detachment a subject that Swift
has directed us, rhetorically, to see in a much less detached way."<span>a</span>
<span>a. easily destroyed or spoilt (This igloo is as fragile as a house of cards; I want to leave before it collapses!)</span>