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Page 1: Barn Burning

Running head: 1

Daniel P Gagnon

Excelsior College

Page 2: Barn Burning

2

In the story Barn Burning Sarty battles with the fact that his father is evil but wants

loyalty of all hid family members. Sarty feels he should be loyal to what he feel is right and

believes his father should pay for what he has done in order for him to stop his evil ways. Sarty

has to choose loyalty to family or loyalty to what is right and turn his father in to the authorities.

In this story Sarty’s thoughts convey how he is torn between his loyalties to his father and

doing what he thinks is the right thing to do. The story starts with Snopes being accused of a

“Barn Burning”. This is where we find out about Snopes youngest son, Colonel Sartoris Snopes,

struggle to support his dad’s problem with being a pyromaniac and Sarty’s sense of right and

wrong when he tells his father that he was going to tell the truth to the judge that his father set

the barn on fire. This is where Snopes lets his son know that he needs to be loyal to his family by

saying “You got to learn to stick to your own blood or you ain't going to have any blood to stick

to you. Do you think either of them, any man there this morning, would” (Faulkner, 1938)? This

is the essence of the main theme of the story which why Faulkner adds this dialogue. The story

continues with the Snopes family finding their new home which Abner Snopes, Sarty’s father,

obtained with a contract which Abner has to fulfil with harvesting the land. Trouble finds Abner

when he enters his employer’s home after stepping in horse manure and when told he needs to

pay for the rug with some of his crop he takes him to court. When Abner loses his court case he

resorts to his pyro ways and collects lamp oil which he uses to burn another barn down.

Another moment when Sarty’s loyalty is tested is during the second trial when Abner is

asked about the rug by the judge but in his rush to defend his father and show his loyalty to his

father he blurts out "He ain't done it! fie ain't burnt . . “(Faulkner, 1938)! This statement shows

Sarty’s desire to defend his father but his sense of what is right getting in the way.

Page 3: Barn Burning

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The climactic ending of this story is when Abner shows Sarty that he is incapable of

changing who he is, an evil man, and he knows he is going to burn Major de Spain’s barn down.

In order to keep Sarty from alerting Major de Spain shows that his father doesn’t trust him to be

loyal to the family so he grabs him up and tells Sartys mother to hold him while he finishes

burning the barn. Sarty’s sense of right finally wins out in the end as he escapes his mother’s

clutches and he runs to warn Major de Spain but too late. The barn is already on fire and Sarty’s

sense of right is leading him away from wrong.

This story shows the battle that goes on in Sarty’s mind and how right finally won out in

the end and how some people would rather do what is right that be a follower. He followed his

rather than his father and ended up on his own. Sarty’s father said it best when he told his son

“You're getting to be a man. You got to learn” (Faulkner, 1938). What his father didn’t know was

that becoming a man meant following his heart.

Page 4: Barn Burning

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References

Faulkner, W. (1938). Barn burning: A story.

Barn Burning by William Faulkner. (n.d.). Retrieved June 14, 2015, from

http://www.williamfaulknerbooks.com/barn_burning_text.html