From the first person perspective, the narrator uses "me" or "us". In the second person's perspective, the narrator uses "you". In "Harrison Bergeron", the narrator used a third person viewpoint. In this style, the narrator uses "he", "her", "it" to point to the characters in the story.
More specifically, the narrator of "Harrison Bergeron" uses a third-person omnipotent narrator. This means that the narrator knows what's going on in the story. The narrator knows what the character is thinking. For example, a narrator knows and describes the intelligence level of George and Hazel. The narrator noticed what they were thinking about and when they forgot. Knowing everything means "omniscience." When Diana Moon Glampers took Harrison and his queen, the narrator knew they were dead before hitting the ground. Third-party omniscient narrator knows all the thoughts and emotions experienced by physical, social background, result, and character. This is the most common form of the story
The first person story means that the story is written in a first person viewpoint (author's viewpoint) and is spoken. This story is conveyed by a person who is talking about myself about myself or who may be thinking about myself. You can identify this kind of story with me and with us. These stories focus mainly on one character - the character tells you that she / he knows, looks, feels, thinks. You do not know the thoughts and emotions of other people (but today, many authors are beginning to write stories from the perspective of some characters - each character has its own chapter in the book)
"Voice" of talking and talking. Some stories are written in first person viewpoint. There, the voice of the narrator is the voice of the viewpoint. For example, in The Huckvent of Huck Finn, the voice of a narrator is the voice of Huck Finn, the hero. Obviously, the historical writer Mark Twain tells a story with a fictitious voice as a speaker - full grammar, spontaneous speech and young inaccuracy. In other stories that are told in the perspective of a third party, scholars use the term narrator to express the voice of the author. For example, Oliver Twist of Charles Dickens proposed a story that the storyteller stood outside the stated behavior. He is not a character that interacts with other characters on the plot. It is attractive to equate such narrator's words and feelings with the opinions of historical authors.