Sunday, May 12, 2019

Burning decision

What makes a short story a good story? What do readers need to continue reading? Most readers want to read the roles they think they can relate to. The reader also wants to complete this story, feeling like it leaves a message, a powerful theme. I think one of the real stories of these two key assets is William Faulkner's Barn Burning. The protagonist of this story is Sarty. What makes this character and story so moving is Sartre's dilemma and the conscious and difficult decision he must make that will change his life with his family forever: he is giving up his blood or the right to social value and moral?

In all of Sarty's life, he saw his father abused him and his family, and only knew the poor white garbage and life. It was obvious from the beginning that Sarty was a little different from his father. We showed them this in the court's first encounter, and his father was accused of burning another man's barn. Sarty was summoned by the judiciary to tell the truth about the father he knew, or to burn Mr. Harris. barn. In this scenario, the author ported Sarty to a way to make readers feel uncomfortable when Sarty tells the truth of the event, considering that we know that his father did burn down the barn. Although Sarty did not speak in this scene, Faulkner accurately revealed the nervousness that Sarty experienced while waiting for Mr. Harris. Answer whether to "question the boy" because of course Sarty either lie or humiliate his father: "But he can hear it, and for a long time, there is absolutely no sound in the crowd, and the small room keeps a quiet and intentional breath, It seems that he is already at the end of the vine, swinging on the ravine, and has completed a long fascinating gravity on the top of the swing, losing weight in time. "From here, I realize Sardy's dilemma: because of his father. Who is who and what kind of person he is, Sarty can't be considered a society and his own honest man, and will not despise his own blood.

When Sarty and his father were heading to the home of the Spanish Major, the story and Sardy's dilemma rose rapidly in this symbolic scene. "He quietly thought of a courthouse with a calm and joyful atmosphere that made him unable to think in words, too young: they were safe to him. Dignity exceeded his touch... "Sarty talks about the home of the Spanish major." He described its facts by comparing it with the courts so that the family symbolizes the beauty of society.

Readers want to know how Sarty's father will respond to the glory and kindness of society [the home of the Spanish major]. "...His father holds and sees the stiff foot that has just stood in a pile of fresh manure, a horse standing in the driveway, and his father can change by simple stride Avoid." In this article, Faulkner keeps the reader wary of what will happen next. In addition, Faulkner also includes symbolic meaning in this passage: As we said, Saty's father can easily avoid feces by "simplely changing the pace". This photo reflects Saty's father's true men's type: a stubborn, disrespectful, polluted man. He could have easily changed his pace, but he did not do so and continued to support his evil qualities.

The last thing in this scene is to reveal how Saty's father and moral society came together: "...the boy watched him turn his legs and saw the stiff feet dragging the turn. The arc, leaving the last long faded smudge. "Fuckner's use of the image really helps the reader see and feel what Sarty is doing. We are shocked by what his father has just done. Prove to the reader and Sarty that his father does not belong to society. He is the dirt of pollution civilization. He is the evil that tarnishes social health.

Sarty has been able to reassess his belief in respect and commitment to his blood. How can he stand behind a man as cruelly as his father? Shortly after the incident, Sarty's miracles and uncertainties were forced to become a reality, as he discovered that his father had begun to burn the Spanish Major's barn. Sarty immediately faced a tough choice: Did he turn his head away from his father and allow him to commit this crime? Or does he warn the Spanish Major and save his barn and his father not to track more of the social dirt he already has? Sarty had seen enough and finally made a decision about his father - about who he is and what he stands for. Sarty knew that he could no longer stand behind him and rushed to the Spanish Major to warn him before his father caused any harm. "...I know it's too late, but he still runs after he hears the short film. After a while, two shots are ringing, now stop, I don't know he has stopped running, crying," Pap! Pap! ""

This is the final scene and conclusion of Sarty's decision. His father is now dead because of Sarty's choice. His decision is to think forever, and at the end of the story he will not go home, but "he continues to go down the mountain to the dark woods, where the liquid silver sound of the birds keeps ringing..." He knows that things with himself and his family will never be the same, but for Sarty, it is worth it; defending society's morality exceeds his respect for his father, who will always coexist with the consequences.




Orignal From: Burning decision

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