As I Lay Dying is told by fifteen different narrators over the course of fifty-nine narrative sections. The first section belongs to Darl Bundren, who introduces us to his brothers Cash and Jewel and his dying mother, Addie. The Bundrens live on a rural farm in Mississippi in the 1920s. Jewel is reserved and introverted; Cash, a skilled —St. Luke adds, as one who had inquired into details, that she was the ruler's only child, was twelve years old, and that she "lay a dying," agreeing with St. Mark's "is at the point of death," literally, in extremis, "at the last gasp;" and both add that the crowd that followed "thronged" and "pressed" our Lord as He Every promise was fulfilled. As decay crawled from it's throat. Like the dead rising from an open grave. Like the dead rising from an open grave. Lips of splendor and tongue of deceit. All dying now as our fragile wrists hold only waste. Like those gasping for their last breath. We cannot hide, there's nothing left.
As I Lay Dying by Faulkner, William. Publication date 1964 Publisher New York: Random House Collection printdisabled; internetarchivebooks; americana Contributor Beaufort County Community College Language English. Access-restricted-item true Addeddate 2012-03-12 18:34:36 Bookplateleaf 0004 Boxid IA154705
dying adj. (at time of death) (figurado) deseo póstumo nm + adj. The old lady's dying request was to be buried next to her husband. El deseo póstumo de la anciana era ser enterrada junto a su marido. dying adj. figurative (diminishing) en peligro de extinción loc adj.
1. At the end of the novel, Darl is committed to an insane asylum for setting a barn on fire. What other factors may be involved in his family's decision to commit him? What justification, if any, is there for his act of arson? 2. Provide a close reading of Addie's monologue in the middle of the novel. . 391 193 411 14 133 336 63 220

as i lay dying explained