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Thursday, March 21, 2019

A Fathers Legacy in William Faulkners Barn Burning Essay -- William

A Fathers Legacy in William Faulkners Short novel Barn Burning The cruel dominance of a father, can quench any flame of hope that builds in the people around him. In William Faulkners short story Barn Burning, Abner is that father. The story portrays a nomadic life story of a family driven from one stageal residence to another. Abner had a craving ache to belittle those around him that thought they were better than him. Although the family accepts the nomadic life, Sarty (the son) dreams of having peace and stability. To suffer this peace, it only requires a lack of conflict. The Snope family was doomed to struggle due to Abners unremitting abettal of conflict, the ongoing domination of his family and his complete lack of respect for the law. Abners instigation of conflict, gives him justification to destroy the center of livlihood (the barn) of those he envies. The ravening and jealous craze he feels when seeing DeSpains home for the first time, leads to his desire to destroy it in some way. After deliberateley stepping in horse droppings, he forces himself in the home past the Negro. The boy saw the prints of the stiff foot on the doorpost and saw them appear on the pale rug behind the reflexive deliberation of the foot. Upon being asked to leave, the boy watched him pivot on the good leg and saw the stiff foot drag round the arc ... going away a final long and fading smear. Although Abner had not appeared to be conscious of the destruction he was doing...

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