In a memoir, authors often blend factual information about events with personal reflection on the experience. Which sentences in this excerpt from Ernest Shackleton's South! show the author reflecting on memories of his experience, rather than recounting factual information?

Respuesta :

Some sentences form Shackleton's South that blend personal and objective experience are:
 
The apathy which seemed to take possession of some of the men at the frustration of their hopes was soon dispelled
(he describes here his own impressions of the apathy)

and this one: it takes a very personal stance, giving the speaker's own impressions of the diet:

Our meals had to consist mainly of seal and penguin; and though this was valuable as an anti-scorbutic, so much so that not a single case of scurvy occurred among the party, yet it was a badly adjusted diet, and we felt rather weak and enervated in consequence.




The apathy which seemed to take possession of some of the men at the frustration of their hopes was soon dispelled

When they were about a mile and a half away their voices were quite audible to us at Ocean Camp, so still was the air.