The author uses the first person point-of-view in order to limit our knowledge. We know only what John tells us as he makes his journey to the Place of the Gods. Consequently, we, like John, are confronted with a mystery to solve. We share John's immediate experience and feelings but we know only what he knows. As the story progresses, the point-of-view allows us to develop a sense of intimacy with John, as if he was talking directly to us. However, when we apply our own knowledge to the objects and places John finds, we begin to know what John is really seeing before he does. When John says, " Perhaps, in the old days, they ate knowledge too fast," the irony is more poignant for the reader, knowing what that knowledge was and how it destroyed the people of that society, than for John.
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