From a first-person point of view, the narrator is a character in the story, dictating events from their perspective using "I" or "we." In the second person, the reader becomes the main character, addressed as "you" throughout the story and being immersed in the narrative. The narrator is the one telling the story. However, not all stories have a narrator, and sometimes stories have a narrator but change point of view.
The point of view of a story is not always the first-person point of view (also known as the narrator's point of view.) An example of this is third person, in which the characters are written as if the narrator is only an observer.
Ive read this before about odysseus but i think he felt like he didn't know where he was and he wanted to get back 2 his family...........hope this helps
The last statement is the best
evidence that support conclusion of Gilgamesh being courageous. In last statement emphases courage as overcoming and confronting fear (in this
example Gilgamesh overcome his fear with the support of a friend Enkidu).