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Friday, February 1, 2019

The Cemetary and Loss in Faulkner’s The Sound and Fury Essay -- Faulkn

The Cemetary and Loss in Faulkners The Sound and temperOn the sixth page of the novel The Sound and The Fury, Caroline Compson informs her son Jason that she and her new(prenominal) son Benjy are going to the cemetery. The sense of loss that runs through untold of Faulkners work, especially The Sound and The Fury, can be found in the quiet, black-and-white world of the dead. In a cemetery one is reminded of lives illogical and lost lives. Faulkner honors both in his novel. The story reveals a multilayered cacophony of loss. The trees and the grave stones in the Laurel Grove cemetery have been around for a large time. So has the Compson family. Yet, I get the impression reading The Sound and The Fury that time is running out for Faulkners fictional dysfunctional family. By the depot of the story the...

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