Which of the following excerpts from "The Neglected Senses" BEST
illustrates the typical first-person point of view used by memoir writers?
A. I was surprised by the ease and harmony the blind students had
with their physical realm and was eager enough to understand it that at
Sabriye's suggestion I agreed to let myself be blindfolded and led
through the streets of Lhasa by two blind teenage girls, Choden and
Yangchen.
B. Choden, a year younger that Yangchen, was pink-cheeked and ever
smiling. She too wore a ponytail, plaid flannel shirt, denim jacket and
pants, baseball cap, and hiking boots.
C. Yangchen, the older of the two, interjected nervously, "Cane? Well,
no. Maybe no cane. Choden must have her own cane. Otherwise she
can lose the road."
D. All the blind students spoke this way--"We are watching you. Nice to
see you. See you again. Please let me see that book." For them, the
vocabulary of vision was metaphorical, a symbolic representation of
human connection, interest, and concern.