your answer is
The narrator recounts the story, as told to him by the Time Traveller.
The narrator recounts the story as told by the Time Traveler
Explanation:
The narrator is invited to a dinner at the Time Travelers house where he arrives after being traveling thru time, so this invited becomse the narrator and he recounts the story as it was told to him by the Time Traveler.
In "The Time Machine", Herbert George Wells shows contrasting picture of the concept of Social Darwinism. Social Darwinism applied Charles Darwin's theory of the "survival of the fittest". The rich will become more rich while the poor will get poorer, maintaining the gap between the two classes. But in the novel, Wells depicts the lesser privileged group, the Morlocks as more superior than the developed upper class, the Eloi. The Morlocks represent the lower working class while the Eloi are the Victorian ruling class. The concept of the higher class passing on their "successful" genes to their future generation is refuted, with the twist of fates in the novel. But Wells also shows both classes evolving into a much more degraded forms of individuals, contrasting Darwin's claims of humans developing into much better individuals.
In "The Time Machine", by H. G. Wells, the main story is presented as follows The narrator recounts the story, as told to him by the Time Traveller.
Explanation:
The main story relates to the Time Traveller, an eminent scientist who has built a time machine to travel through time. The protagonist, the Time Traveller, is never named by the novel. The narrator tells the story by recounting the Time Traveller’s weekly lectures.
In "The Time Machine", by H. G. Wells, the main story is presented as follows The narrator recounts the story, as told to him by the Time Traveller. The main story relates to the Time Traveller, an eminent scientist who has built a time machine to travel through time. The narrator is Mr. Hillyer, a guest in the Time Traveller's dinner party.