Synthesized answer
The provided passages offer glimpses into Faulkner's narrative style but do not explicitly explain how his choice of narration and sentence structure create an immediate sense of confusion or disorientation, nor do they detail the effect this has on the reader's engagement with the world and characters.
However, the passages do showcase characteristics that could contribute to such an effect. The narrative often presents fragmented thoughts and sensory impressions without clear transitions, such as the opening of Passage 1, which jumps from "lent fecundity" to a broken leg and a horse. Similarly, Passage 2 mixes dialogue with internal reflections and repeated phrases like "Moving sitting still," contributing to a disorienting flow. The lack of clear temporal or logical sequencing in these snippets suggests a narrative that might challenge a reader's expectation of straightforward storytelling.
The passages do not provide enough information to fully answer how this initial experience affects engagement with the world and characters.
Synthesized from the book passages below. Chat with the book on Feynman for follow-up.
From the book
lent fecundity that satisfied ever bread-hunger like. Flowing around you, not brooding and nursing every niggard stone. Like it were put to makeshift for enough green to go around among the trees and even the blue of distance not that rich chimaera. _told me the bone would have to be broken again and inside me it began to say Ah Ah Ah and I began to sweat. What do I care I know what a broken leg is all it is it wont be anything I’ll just have to stay in the house a little longer that’s all and my jaw-muscles getting numb and my mouth saying Wait Wait just a minute through the sweat ah…
entin, isn’t it?” Miss Laura said. Then more silence and the cruel unwinking minds and hands jerking into the silence. “Tell Quentin who discovered the Mississippi River, Henry.” “DeSoto.” Then the minds would go away, and after a while I’d be afraid I had gotten behind and I’d count fast and fold down another finger, then I’d be afraid I was going too fast and I’d slow up, then I’d get afraid and count fast again. So I never could come out even with the bell, and the released surging of feet moving already, feeling earth in the scuffed floor, and the day like a pane of glass struck…
=_William Faulkner_= =THE SOUND= =AND= =THE FURY= [Illustration] RANDOM HOUSE _New York_ _Copyright, 1929, by William Faulkner_ _Copyright renewed, 1956, by William Faulkner_ All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in New York by Random House, Inc., and distributed in Canada by Random…
rawn rapidly offstage. The street turned again. I could see the white cupola, the round stupid assertion of the clock. _Sold the pasture_ _Father will be dead in a year they say if he doesnt stop drinking and he wont stop he cant stop since I since last summer and then they’ll send Benjy to Jackson I cant cry I cant even cry one minute she was standing in the door the next minute he was pulling at her dress and bellowing his voice hammered back and forth between the walls in waves and she shrinking against the wall getting smaller and smaller with her white face her eyes like…
ion of mechanical hands on an arbitrary dial which is a symptom of mind-function. Excrement Father said like sweating. And I saying All right. Wonder. Go on and wonder. If it had been cloudy I could have looked at the window, thinking what he said about idle habits. Thinking it would be nice for them down at New London if the weather held up like this. Why shouldn’t it? The month of brides, the voice that breathed _She ran right out of the mirror, out of the banked scent. Roses. Roses. Mr and Mrs Jason Richmond Compson announce the marriage of._ Roses. Not virgins like dogwood,…
More questions about this book
- How does the narrator's unique perspective, characterized by repetitive observation and lack of complex internal thought, compel the reader to infer meaning rather than be explicitly told it? What specific textual clues hint at the narrator's cognitive state, and how does this impact your trust in the narrative?
- Analyze the power dynamics and emotional complexity in the interactions between "I" and Luster. What specific dialogue and actions reveal their history, their current roles, and the underlying frustrations or dependencies?
- Consider the repeated descriptions of the flapping flag, the golf game, and the changing shadows. How do these seemingly mundane observations acquire symbolic weight or foreshadow thematic concerns within the excerpt, and what might they reveal about the characters' perceptions or the passage of time?
- Beyond the immediate actions, what larger societal or historical context does the excerpt subtly hint at through details like Luster's language, the presence of a golf course, and the specific date? How might these elements begin to establish the world of the novel, even in this brief introduction?