Answer:
What Lincoln wishes to do through this final sentence of the speech is:
C. stir up emotions about the lives lost in the war and encourage the listener to help end it.
Explanation:
President Abraham Lincoln does NOT wish his listeners to feel sad or angry. Nor does he want them to blame anyone. That's why he says, "With malice toward none, with charity for all." He then moves on to ask his audience to help take care of the families of the soldiers who have bravely lost their lives in the war. Besides that, he wants to "achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace," meaning he wants the war to end and peace to reign. Lincoln is stirring up emotions in his audience, but not inflamed, hostile emotions. He wishes to inspire them to be good, charitable, empathetic. He wants them to worry about a peaceful future instead of worrying about blame. He wishes to urge them to fight for peace in honor of those who have died for it.
The <span> lines indicate that the speaker is concerned about what others think of him are:
</span>
With a bald spot in the middle of my hair—
[They will say: “How his hair is growing thin!”]
Answer: third-person omniscient point of view
Explanation:
When the narrator is not part of a story and knows all the characters' thoughts and feelings, the author uses the third-person omniscient point of view.
On the other hand, the limited point of view occurs when the doesn't know the feelings and thought of the character but rather relates their own thoughts, and feelings about the characters.