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English, 26.03.2020 02:37 hailey200127

What do the reactions to Sir Launcelot’s “Mad Trist” reveal about the narrator’s and Roderick’s different points of view in the passage?

A) The narrator misses the parallels between Ethelred’s actions and those of Lady Madeline, accidentally exacerbating Roderick even further.

B) The narrator brushes off the noise of Madeline’s escape as coincidence when matching Ethelred’s situation, showing his engrossment in fiction whereas Roderick is all too present in reality, despite his madness.

C) The narrator considers the writing of the “Mad Trist” boring, but Roderick applies the fictitious action to the events of the storm, exciting his anxieties further.

D) The narrator only comes to recognize the house as sentient when the doors, like the jaws of the dragon from the “Mad Trist,” open to reveal a half-dead Madeline, suggesting that the two male characters briefly share a similar point of view only at the end of the piece.

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