In one sense, The Sound and the Fury takes place during Easter weekend, 1928. A carnival comes to Jefferson, Mississippi, where the Compson family lives. Mrs. Compson, a selfish, complaining woman, lies in bed all day while the black housekeeper, Dilsey, cooks and cleans. Mrs. Compson is a widow with two sons. Jason, who works in a hardware store, supports the family. The younger son, Benjamin, usually called Benjy, is an idiot. At thirty-three, he still has the mind of a child. Benjy is looked after by Luster, Dilsey’s teenaged grandson. The household has one other member–Quentin, the seventeen-year-old daughter of Jason’s older sister Candace, nicknamed Caddy. Caddy’s husband left her when he realized that the infant she had just given birth to couldn’t possibly be his. So Caddy sent the baby home for her mother and Dilsey to raise. Quentin is named for the Compson family’s oldest son, who killed himself eighteen years earlier while he was a student at Harvard.
Not much occurs from Good Friday to Easter Sunday. The most important event is that a show comes to town. Luster takes Benjy to the golf course to look for lost quarters so that he can buy a ticket. Jason has extra tickets but burns them in the stove in front of Luster rather than give them to him. Jason is constantly criticizing Quentin. On Saturday night, Quentin slides down the drainpipe and runs away with a man from the show. Before she leaves, she steals Jason’s savings. When Jason realizes on Sunday that both his niece and his money are gone, he chases futilely after them. What makes Jason angriest of all is that he can’t tell anyone, not even the police, how much money Quentin actually took. The $3000 that Jason does report was his life’s savings. But he’d also had $4000 that he’d stolen from Quentin. All along, when Caddy had sent money for Quentin’s support, Jason had pretended that his mother tore up the checks, whereas, in reality, he had only given her forged ones to destroy. Secretly, he had cashed the real checks and hidden the money in his room, where Quentin found it. Since he wasn’t supposed to have this $4000, he couldn’t let on that it was gone. On his return home, Jason runs into Luster and Benjy. Luster has taken Benjy for a carriage ride but is driving around the square the wrong way. That makes Benjy uncomfortable and he is screaming. Jason turns the surrey around so it travels in the direction Benjy is used to.
The Term Paper on Compson Family Quentin Benjy Caddy
... at Luster. Luster asks Jason for a quarter. At dinner, Jason interrogates Quentin about the man she was with that afternoon and threatens to send Benjy ... friendship and offers him some money, which Quentin rejects. They are just beginning to fight again when Caddy enters and asks Herbert ... need ever know we can take my school money we can cancel my matriculation Caddy you hate him dont you" (151). She ...
That isn’t much of a story. But The Sound and the Fury is about much more than that weekend in 1928. The Compsons’ present is totally shaped by the past. Faulkner brings the past into the novel both through its structure–separate sections for each of the three Compson brothers, and one for the author–and through his style. Quentin’s section is set entirely in the past. It takes place on the day before his suicide, June 2, 1910. As he prepares to die Quentin broods over what has gone on in his family. And although Benjy’s section is set in the novel’s present, 1928, the past is just like the present for Benjy. He can’t tell the difference between the fire in the kitchen in 1928 and the fire in his mother’s bedroom in 1900 when he was five. Benjy’s section is filled with glimpses of the Compson children while growing up. Jason is able to cope with the present better than the other Compsons, but his section, too, contains many old resentments against his sister that he transfers to his niece.
Benjy’s and Quentin’s sections reveal the past as a backdrop against which the events of the present take place. The children’s grandmother, whom they called Damuddy, died in 1898. In 1900, when Benjy was five, the family realized how severely retarded he was. He had originally been named Maury, for Mrs. Compson’s brother. Now, because his mental retardation might reflect on the Bascombs, she wanted to change his name. Caddy’s growing interest in boys in 1906-1908 upset both Quentin and Benjy, who in their different ways depended on her love. In 1909, Caddy slept with her boyfriend, Dalton Ames. Later she became pregnant and was forced to marry Herbert Head, a man she didn’t love. At Caddy’s wedding in April 1910, Benjy got drunk on champagne. After she left home, Benjy, waiting by the gate, ran after and grabbed a neighborhood girl who was walking home from school. Probably he confused her with Caddy, whom he used to wait for. In any case, in order to keep him from sexually attacking girls, the family had him castrated. Quentin dealt with his own distress about Caddy in a different way–a month later, he killed himself. Two years later, Mr. Compson, the children’s father, died.
The Essay on Dilsey Compson Benjy Caddy
There are four Compson children, and four chapters in The Sound and the Fury. Each of the three previous chapters has been narrated by one of the Compson children; the only one left is Caddy. Since Caddy is in many ways the most important character in the book, it would be natural to expect Caddy to be the narrator of the fourth section. But instead, Caddy is cut out of the novel completely: this ...
The brief summary of events at the end of this section may be useful to you as you read the novel’s first two sections. But they aren’t the whole story either. In an appendix that Faulkner wrote about fifteen years after The Sound and the Fury was published, he filled in more of the Compson’s past and also brought their story forward to the 1940s. His history of the Compson family begins with the Indian chief who originally owned the land that became the town of Jefferson. The Appendix also reveals that, after Mrs. Compson died in 1933, Jason sold the family home and put Benjy in a state asylum. The old Compson place was turned into a boardinghouse and later was sold to a real estate developer. Caddy, according to the Appendix, married and divorced a Hollywood executive. In the 1940s the town librarian found a picture of a woman like Caddy with a Nazi general.
The Appendix links the novel to larger events in the country and the world. It also lets you see the story of the Compson family as a part of the history of the South. That history starts with the Indians and goes on through the era of slavery and the Civil War. Eventually the great old families like the Compsons die out. They are replaced by people Faulkner in other novels called the Snopeses–characters who share Jason’s meanness and money-grubbing nature. The tract houses that eventually cover the Compson land are a symbol of what becomes of the South.
The Essay on Family and Life Story Work
?In this assignment I aim to discuss life story work: which can provide the care worker, and care receiver a better understanding of each other’s needs, and provide the care worker with information that can help support the care receiver in the best way. The carer needs to possess certain skills sensitivity, confidentiality, empathy, trustworthiness, and have commitment to seeing the story to the ...