The point of view of the "Love of Life" is omniscient third person. The narrator knows everything, but concentrates primarily on the man and his fight for life against nature. The narrator also knows what the scientific men are saying and doing at the end of the story. This is something the man is probably unaware of and so this makes the narrator omniscient.
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In Act III, scene 2, why may the establishment of Claudius's guilt be considered the crisis of the revenge plot?
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