This section contains 895 words (approx. 3 pages at 400 words per page) |
Point of View
The novel is told from the third-person, limited, point of view. The narrator is reliable, entirely effaced, and unnamed. Jack Aubrey and Stephen Maturin, the main characters, are the protagonists and central figures in all of the scenes in the novel. The narrator divulges some internal thoughts of the two protagonists, but not of other characters. The majority of the story is told through action and dialogue; revealed thoughts are very infrequent and are used for characterization rather than plot development. Occasional letters or journal entries, such as those found in Chapter 4, allow for some first-person introspection without destroying the cadence of the overall narrative structure.
The third-person point of view allows Aubrey and Maturin to be presented in a highly sympathetic manner. For example, the narrative structure portrays Maturin's penurious manners as frugal rather than stingy. The narrative also allows portrayal of characters' life situations...
This section contains 895 words (approx. 3 pages at 400 words per page) |