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Barn Burning

Essay by   •  June 14, 2011  •  284 Words (2 Pages)  •  1,023 Views

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The story opens with Abnernathy Snopes, the father of young Sartoris Snopes, being driven out of town after burning down a neighboring farmer's barn. No palpable proof can point to Abner as the culprit, which allows him to evade the usually severe punishment for such a grave crime. The Snopes family is ordered to move along to begin life anew, but Abner Snopes cannot seem to control his pyromania and hatred for society. [He is portrayed as a man who, as it is put in older Southern times, does not abide by the law of the land.] Consequently, he moves to exact his revenge and assert his 'superiority' at the cost of his current landlord and aristocrat, Major de Spain. Sartoris, his son (often referred to as "the boy" or "Sarty"), loving his father yet also knowing his father's intentions, warns Major de Spain of his father's intentions to burn down his barn and flees out to continue the run to his father. When he hears the fast approach of the horse of "the white man," Sarty clears the way, of the dark road, for Major de Spain to continue on. At approximately the time the boy is unable to continue, the young Sartoris hears the sound of two gun shots perhaps indicating his father's murder and potentially that of his older brother, who indeed was his father's accomplice. [However, as Faulkner often does, he makes references to the characters in a later work, revealing that neither the father nor the brother were killed by the gunshots.] This deeply disturbs the boy. Profoundly affected by his father's legacy, the boy does not return to his family but rather continues on with his life alone.

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