Friday, April 24, 2020
The Sound And The Fury By William Faulkner 1929 Essays -
  The Sound and the Fury By William Faulkner 1929    The Sound and the    Fury    By William Faulkner    1929    Main Characters    Caddy - The book tells her story in the  first three sections discussing parts of her childhood and growth continuing  with her illegitimate daughter in the third section.    Benjy - He is the narrator of the first  section and 33 at the time, but has a mental illness which makes him deaf  and dumb.    Quentin - He is the narrator of the second  section during his freshman year at Harvard during which he commits suicide.    Jason - He is a brother of the three previous  main characters and the narrator of the 3 section who describes his relationships  with Caddy and her daughter.    Minor Characters    Dilsey - She is a black servant of the    Compson household and the one to see their doom in the fourth section.    Caroline Compson - She is the mother of  the main character and a hypochondriac.    Three main settings    The Compson house - Most of the story takes  place here at the house of the Compson family.    Boston - The second section happens in    Boston as Quentin prepares for his suicide.    Mottstown - Parts of the fourth section  happen here has Jason chase Miss Quentin trying to get back the money she  stole from him.    Plot    The book begins with a section narrated  by Benjy. The narration moves back and forth through times since    Benjy, being an idiot, has no sense of time. In the present, Benjy  is 33. However, we see incidents from his past experiences such as    Damuddy's funeral, and the various experiences with Caddy. Near the  end of his section, he is mistaken to have sexually assaulted a girl and  we find out that he is castrated later in the book. The second section  is narrated by Quentin and shows his preparations for his suicide.    In the start of the section, he breaks his watch in somewhat of an attempt  to escape time. He prepares his suicide notes and gives them to Deacon  whom he tells to deliver the notes the next day. He travels around    Boston but gets arrested for trying to take a young Italian girl home.    He gets in a fight with a guy named Gerald bland, and later drowns himself.    The third section is narrated by Jason. This shows the way he takes  money from Caddy intended for Quentin. It also shows Quentin's developing  sexuality and rebelliousness. Jason partly attempts to discipline  her, but it seems more for his entertainment than for a caring for the  girl. The fourth section is from an omniscient viewpoint and focuses  largely on Dilsey. Dilsey goes to an Easter service where she hears  the preacher preach a sermon which reflects the Compson household.    Through the sermon, she also sees the inevitable doom facing the Compson  household. This section also follows Jason to Mottstown following    Quentin who stole $7,000 from him.    Symbols    Quentin's watch - The watch was given to  him by his father and symbolizes life and time. By breaking the watch,    Quentin attempts to escape time and ultimately his life.    Dilsey - Dilsey symbolizes the only form  of reason and logic in the Compson house. All other characters are  doomed to life ineffectual lives but she sees the fall that is happening  while not experiencing it herself.    Style    Faulkner's style in this novel is very  unconventional. He arranges the novel in four sections which doesn't  have the typical chronological part, but shows parts of the story at a  time from any which time period. His writing is very characteristic  of the narrator with Benjy writing simply from a very objective point of  view, Quentin being neurotic, and Jason being sadistic.    Philosophy    Faulkner shows in this book the tragic  fall of a family in this book. He seems to warn against weak family  ties showing that to be a great cause of the tragedy of the Compson house.    Quotes    "They took the flag out, and they were  hitting. Then they put the flag back and they went to the table,  and he hit and the other hit. Then they went on, and I went along  the fence." Benjy narrates this section in the beginning of the book  showing his viewpoint of what seems to be golfers.    "When the shadow of the sash appeared in  the curtains it was between seven and eight oclock and then I was in time  again, hearing the watch. It was Grandfather's and when Father gave  it to me he said I give you the mausoleum of all hope and desire; it's  rather excruciatingly apt that you will use it to gain the reducto absurdum  of all human experience which can fit your    
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