The point of view in the story "The Destructors" by Graham Greene is third-person point of view. In third-person point of view, the narrator is someone that can see everything that is going on in the story but is not necessarily a character in the story. Other stories with this point of view are the Harry Potter series and the Chronicles of Narnia series.
Omniscient.
To destroy implies an unstructured undoing of some thing. To destruct, as the boys of this gang have done, suggests a more organized, systematic taking-apart of the thing. This view is supported by Greene's passage: "Streaks of light came in through the closed shutters where they worked with the seriousness of creators -- and destruction after all is a form of creation. A kind of imagination had seen this house as it had now become." Greene doesn't seem to be saying that these boys or people like them are in a creative class with Christopher Wren, the architect who built this home. But Greene does ask the reader to acknowledge that these boys (or at least their current leader, T.) are trying to realize some specific conception, too.
It depends on your point of view. It depends on your point of view. It depends on your point of view.
An omission point is this: ... A point of view is a way of thinking about something An opinion
The point of view in the story is from the view of the bully in the story. This is the first story in which a story has been told from the bully's point of view.
Point of view is what it is called.
The point of view of a text is the:
Point of view or POV is a director's instruction to film a story from the point of view of a character, a group of characters or from the audience's point of view.
the point of view for the fist seven years is frist point of view!:)
The plural form of point of view is points of view.
The plural form of "point of view" is "points of view."
1st point of view