You usually don't. Leave stuff like that for the experts -- and even they have a lot of trouble switching POV in the middle of a book! Use one POV throughout.
First Person And Third Person
Common
First & third person narratives are the most frequently used perspectives in fiction.
Third-person, obviously. Did you see a 'you' or 'I' in the entire narrative? Third-person omniscient to be exact.
Third person omniscient is a style of writing fiction in which the story is told by a narrator ("third person") who knows the whereabouts and activities of all the characters ("omniscient").
Neither a journal nor a biography is fiction. A journal is typically a first-person account of daily events, and a biography is a third-person account of a life story. Some liberties and biases can be taken with both of these forms, but neither is straight fiction.
Personal Pronouns The first person, singular, subjective: I The first person, singular, objective: me The first person, plural, subjective: we The first person, plural, objective: us The third person, singular, subjective: he, she, it The third person, singular, objective: him, her, it The third person, plural, subjective: they The third person, plural, objective: them
Fiction is usually written in either first person, where the story is told from the perspective of a character using "I" or third person, where the narrator is external to the story and uses "he," "she," or "they" to refer to the characters. Each choice offers a different level of intimacy and perspective for the reader.
I is first person. You is second person. He or She is third person.
first person last and third
First person. Nope. "He" is the third person, masculine, singular, subjective pronoun.
No, was is past tense. It is used for first and third person singular subjects.I was (first person singular)We were (first person plural)You were (second person singular and plural)He/She/It was (third person singular)They were (third person plural)