Tuesday, August 20, 2019
The Themes of William Faulkners As I Lay Dying Essay -- As I Lay Dyin
William Faulkner in his book "As I Lay Dying" portrays a Mississippi family  which goes through many hardships and struggles.  Faulkner uses imagery to  illustrate an array of central themes such as the conscious being or existence  and poverty among many others. From the first monologue, you will find and  indulgence of sensual appeal, they are a strong aspect through out the  novel.  Each character develops stronger and stronger by their  passages.   One of the themes in As I Lay Dying is a Human's relations  to nature, Faulkner uses imagery in the sense that he relates some the character  to animals.        One of the central themes in As I lay dying is the attachment to  nature.  Darl  in this passage relates "the still surface of the water  a round orifice in nothingness, where before I stirred it awake with the dipper  I could see maybe a star or tow in the bucket, and maybe in the dipper a star or  two before I drank."(p.455)  His physical necessities are being met, this  is a central theme in As I lay Dying, meeting your needs, survival, through out  all the tragedies that occur.  But here Faulkner shows that there is some  progress, due to Darl finding a way to enhance the experience of drinking plain  old water by drinking it out of a wooden bucket.  The wooden bucket  enriches the flavor of water, and connects you to nature through taste.   Darl has found a better way to satisfy his needs.           William Faulkner overwhelms his audience with the visual perceptions that the  characters experience, making the reader feel utterly attached to nature and  using imagery how a human out of despair can make accusations. "If I jump off  the porch I will be where...              ... Imagery alone can be sufficient to give the reader a rich sense  of emotion, but when it symbolizes the themes of the Story and reflects on the  characteristics of the narrator it is truly a master piece.  Imagery has  been used by William Faulkner to create parallels that strengthen the themes of  the story.  The imagery is used a tool to appeal to the reader to convey  the authors purpose.  It distinguishes literature and helps us appreciate  the arts.  Imagery in As I Lay Dying is like painting a picture with only  thoughts and observations, add to the equation alternate views and biased views,  and we have ourselves a great piece of literature.           Work Cited     Faulkner, William. "As I Lay Dying." The Norton Introduction to the Short  Novel. 3rd Ed. Jerome Beaty. New York: W.W Norton & Company, Inc. 455, 468,  466, 456.                        
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