Friday, August 28, 2020

Predatory Men in William Faulkner’s Novel, Sanctuary Essay -- Faulkner

Savage Men in William Faulkner’s Novel, Sanctuary William Faulkner’s epic, Sanctuary, is loaded with nuance and imagery. On the way to Old Frenchman’s Place, Temple Drake considers baseball players in the Saturday game she is absent as â€Å"crouching, expressing short, crying cries like swamp fowl upset by a gator, not sure of where the risk is, still, poised† (37). In making such a picture of predation, Faulkner readies the peruser for Temple’s landing in Old Frenchman’s Place â€the prey/predator allegory loaning itself consummately to Temple’s circumstance vis-à -vis the men there. All through the novel, Faulkner depicts Temple as catlike or creature like. At the point when she articles to Gowan Stevens heading to Lee Goodwin’s looking for liquor, he advises her, â€Å"Don’t get your back up, now† (37); and she is continually springing here and there and ripping at entryways or covers, as though she were a dexterous and anxious feline. When Goodwin discovers her squatting toward the side of his kitchen he lifts her â€Å"by the scruff of the neck, similar to a kitten† (52), and Popeye comparatively grasps her b...

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