POSSIBLY <span>D. Reverend Dimmesdale HOPEFULLY
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concurrent points or intersecting points
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[She] had kindled the callow fancy of the most idle and shiftless of all
the village lads, and had conceived for this Howard Carpenter one of
those absurd and extravagant passions which a handsome country boy of
twenty one sometimes inspires in a plain, angular, spectacled woman of
thirty. (Willa Cather, "A Wagner Matinee")
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I believe that the correct answer here is the first option.
Here we see a narrator who is addressing a fight that has already happened and here we see that he is pride. We see that in his clear opinion of the fighting and the belief in his skill, because he would not wait for darkness, because he would not need that, as he is certain that he is good enough to win a fight in broad daylight. Here we see the narrators pride.
Answer:
<u>past; third-person</u>
<u>Explanation:</u>
Yes, the excerpt from The Conjure-Man Dies is written in the<u> past tense</u>, from a <u>third-person</u> point of view.
In the English language, a tense refers to an indicator telling when an action occurs, while the past tense refers to an action that has happened before. The <u>third-person</u> point of view refers to a story told from the perspective of another person (the third party). It often using words like 'he, she, they.'