A first-person narrator is usually a character in the very story he is telling. For that reason, he can only tell the audience the things he knows, which can be limited or erroneous, or his assumptions, which can be quite biased. ... They lack impartiality since the story being told is influenced by their feelings
Idk i'm guessing b bc that's not that important everything else is if taft makes sense
This repetition effects the audience because it gives a symbol of what gilgamesh wanted to do and it creates a pattern so the audience can follow
not sure but