![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() This also helps the reader to feel that the narrator is perfectly aware of the events which take place in the story and this makes the readers want to ask the narrator different questions which is a sign of his domination. The domination can also be felt when the crime scenes or just the interior of premises is described because the narrator is trying to show that he knows more about what’s going on in the story even such insignificant details as to where the table is and in which order are the papers lying on it. For instance, he describes the Prefect as a person who treats the things he does not understand as the odd ones. The domination can be observed in numerous scene descriptions and in telling the readers about different characters, their appearance, and their life in general. What should be mentioned above all is that the narrator in “The Purloined Letter” serves as means of controlling and dominating. ![]()
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