In "To Kill a Mockinbird," by Harper Lee, the narrator is Scout, a five yearl-old girl in rural Southern America. Through her eyes, readers can see a story of racism and prejudice with her innocent and thoughtful view, without any lies. Her father Atticus has raised her wisely to encourage her individuality, and is convinced that she is absolutely able to realize when somebody hides something. Her experiences facing good and evil situations eventually turn her into a mature young girl by the end of the story.
This is a sonnet by Elizabeth Barrett Browning which means that it is written in a Iambic Pentameter.
C) As a solution, the summer she was 16, she attended a rigorous eight-week circus camp.
Explanation: I can't see your choices so [hope this still helps]:
According to Hobbes (Leviathan, 1651), the state of nature was one in which there were no enforceable criteria of right and wrong.
The point is third-person omniscient subjective.
You can tell because the passage states the thoughts/feelings of multiple characters, while not using "I" or "You" or any other first or second person pronouns.
Hope this helped!