Answer:
I don't know If you mean like this but...
Explanation:
"The first time I saw my now-husband, I was 15 years old. It was summer, he was my waiter, and as we locked eyes, I swear everything around me slowed down and I knew. It was only a second as he was walking around a corner, but he remembers that second as clearly as I do, as if it were yesterday. I had never seen a more good-looking guy (granted, I was only 15, but I had had my share of boyfriends). That night, we met up for a movie after his shift. He kissed me for the first time (although he will tell you I was the one who kissed him), and I swear, my breath caught, my head swooned, and we both knew that this was something more than a passing fling. It's now 15 years later; we have been married for seven years and have three children who are the lights of our lives. I get butterflies every time he kisses me, and we both still talk about that very first time we saw each other and how we knew, 15 years ago, that something clicked, something connected between us. If anything deems to be called love at first sight, it would be this."
An interior narrative, also called interior monologue, is a narrative technique that is used to depict a character's thoughts, feelings and impressions that goes through the minds of these protagonists, in a form of a narrative. This is usually used in dramatic and nondramatic fiction.
The statement that best reflects Hilary Kromberg Inlis's viewpoint in <em>The Light of Gandhi's Lamp</em> is the first one: black South Africans should be treated the same as white South Africans.
The author narrates a story where the main character's sister is in prison for fighting peacefully against the Apartheid and tells stories about her childhood where the reader can vividly understand how different white and black africans were treated.
She describes how unfair was that the maids were all black and how they were not allowed to stay in the "<em>white area residences</em>". Black people in Africa had to live in the countrysides and couldn't mix with common white people, from the government's point of view, they were <em>second class people</em>, they only existed in order to <em>serve</em> the white.