Respuesta :
This fact that this passage is from the perspective of an unreliable narrator is supported by the fact that nobody believes the narrator and at times she barely believes herself.
When she asks Agnes, it is clear that Agnes believes the narrator was dreaming or is lying. The narrator then second guesses herself and tries to justify the vision she saw as some friend of the servants. She decides not to ask anyone else (in case they also think she is making it up), which leads the reader to think that she might not be entirely reliable.
When she asks Agnes, it is clear that Agnes believes the narrator was dreaming or is lying. The narrator then second guesses herself and tries to justify the vision she saw as some friend of the servants. She decides not to ask anyone else (in case they also think she is making it up), which leads the reader to think that she might not be entirely reliable.
Answer:
The narrator does not trust what she has seen.
Explanation:
This is the statement that supports the idea that the story is told by an unreliable narrator. The first thing we learn in this passage is that the woman is very sure of having seen someone who appeared to be a nurse. Nevertheless, when she discusses this with Agnes, she begins to doubt her own experience. She then tells us that maybe the woman was not a nurse, and she decides that she will not ask more questions. The fact that the narrator does not trust what she has seen shows that she is an unreliable narrator.