Wednesday, March 11, 2020
Close reading of barn burning essays
Close reading of barn burning essays Monstrous Features Now he could hear his fathers stiff foot as it came down on the boards with clock like finality, a sound out of all proportion to the displacement of the body it bore and which was not dwarfed either by the white door before it, as though it had attained to a sort of vicious and ravening minimum not to be dwarfed by anything- the flat, wide, black hat, the formal coast of broadcloth which had once been black but which had now that friction-glazed greenish cast of the bodies of old house flies, the lifted sleeve which was to large, the lifted hand like a curled claw. (Faulkner 158) In this sentence Faulkner compares and contrasts Abner to monster like qualities through Sartys point of view. Faulkner makes Abner seem indestructible by comparing his stiff foot to the white door before it. Faulkner states that his foot was not dwarfed either by the white door, therefore making him seem as though he were a monster. Faulkner goes on to explain that Abner had attained to a sort of vicious and ravening minimum not to be dwarfed by anything, meaning that he is so powerful, and nothing can stop him. Faulkners description of Abner Snopes creates an inferior mood for the readers. His negative words such as vicious, and ravening, makes Abner seem inhumane, rather comparable to a monster. Faulkner also uses the simile, the lifted hand like a curled claw, to make him seem even more like the antagonist in the story. At this point in the story Abner is about to walk through De Spains home and wreck his rug, and the author has created this sense of mood from the inhumane character of Abner. One can picture Abner walking through the house with the inhumane characteristics Faulkner explained about him through this sentence. Through Sartys point of ...
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