Published
October 6, 1930, by Jonathan Cape and Harrison Smith.
Faulkners first novel published after The
Sound and the Fury, As I Lay Dying has been acclaimed
as one of Faulkner’s greatest novels as well as a self-proclaimed
“tour de force” by Faulkner himself. Like the novel
before it, it is told in stream-of-conscious fashion by fifteen
different speakers in some 59 chapters. In its depiction of the
Bundren familys quest
to Jefferson to bury their
dead matriarch, Addie,
among her “people,” against the threats of flood and
fire, the novel explores the nature of grieving, community, and
family.
The Story
As the novel opens, Addie
Bundren lies dying in her bed in her familys farmhouse
in southeastern Yoknapatawpha
County. Neighbors come to visit, while outside her oldest son,
Cash, is sawing and hammering
together her coffin. Her second son, Darl,
convinces his brother Jewel
(Addie’s third son) to go with him to pick up a load of lumber.
Though he realizes Addie will probably die before they return, he
convinces his father, Anse,
that it is okay because “It means three dollars.” Darl’s
apparent goal is to make sure that Jewel, Addie’s favorite
son, will not be at her side when she dies.
While Addie’s daughter, Dewey
Dell, stays with her, her youngest son, Vardaman,
goes fishing and catches a very big fish, which Anse tells Dewey
Dell to cook for their dinner. (Later, Vardaman begins to confuse
the fish with his dead mother, resulting in Faulkner’s shortest,
and one of his most famous-or infamous-chapters: “My mother
is a fish.”)
Dr.
Peabody arrives at the Bundrens’ house just in time to
watch Addie die, and in outrage Vardaman chases away his horse and
wagon. They are later recovered by Lon
Quick. Just after Addie’s death a violent storm breaks,
and Darl’s and Jewel’s lumber-laden wagon loses a wheel
in a ditch. Meanwhile, young Vardaman drills holes into the coffin
lid (so his mother can breathe), and inadvertently drills into her
face. By the time the coffin and the wagon’s wheel are repaired,
three days have passed, but finally, the family can set off on their
journey to bury Addie.
The Journey
Years earlier, shortly after Darl was born,
Addie had asked her husband to bury her in Jefferson,
where her “people” were from, when she died. So to keep
the promise he made to Addie, Anse sets off with his children toward
Jefferson.
As the novel’s plot proceeds in stop-start
fashion through the discrete monologues by the various speakers,
more and more information is revealed about the Bundrens, their
grief, and their society. The most conscientious Bundren, as well
as the most detached, is Darl-who, it turns out, has always been
regarded as odd by those who know him. Nevertheless, he is near-omniscient
in his knowledge about his family: he knows, for instance, that
his sister Dewey Dell
is pregnant, and he also intuits that Jewel is only his half-brother-that
he is not Anse’s son.
All of the Bundrens except for Darl and Jewel
have ulterior motives for wanting to go on the long journey to Jefferson.
Anse, the most selfish of them, wants a new set of teeth. Cash wants
a phonograph (or as he calls it, a “graphophone”), and
Vardaman wants to get a toy train. Dewey Dell wants to get an abortion
(with the ten dollars that Lafe,
the would-be father, has given her).
The First Threat: Flood
Their first major hurdle in their journey
is the flood-swollen Yoknapatawpha
River. They go well out of their way to one bridge, which has
been swept away, then return to a bridge closer to home, which is
likewise damaged by the flood. They nonetheless decide to chance
crossing-which turns out to be a mistake. In the process, Cash’s
leg is broken and their mules are drowned; it is only by sheer strength
(or rage) that Jewel is able to keep Addie’s coffin from being
swept away as well.
Now that the Bundrens are muleless, neighbors
of the Bundrens believe Anse will want to borrow their mules, but
he has something else in mind. He makes an arrangement with a kinsman
of Flem Snopes to trade
Cash’s eight dollars (which he had planned to use to buy the
phonograph) and Jewel’s beloved horse, for which Jewel had
worked many nights to obtain and which he treats more kindly than
most human beings, for a new team of mules.
To continue their journey, the Bundrens had
to go south to “Mottson”
in the neighboring county and then head north along the main road
to Jefferson. While in Mottson, they are treated with ever-increasing
outrage: Addie’s decomposing body is beginning to smell and
to attract buzzards. Dewey Dell tries to get an abortion but she
is rebuffed by a morally upright and law-abiding pharmacist. To
doctor Cash’s broken leg, Anse buys some cement and uses it
to place a cast on Cash’s leg.
The Second Threat: Fire
About midway between Mottson and Jefferson,
the Bundrens spend a night at Gillespie’s
place. During the night, the barn where Addie’s coffin was
being stored catches fire, and again it was saved only by the ferocity
of Jewel’s efforts. Vardaman reveals that he had seen something,
but Dewey Dell tells him not to repeat it.
The Journey Complete
Nine days after Addie’s death, the Bundrens
finally arrive in Jefferson. Anse borrows some shovels from a “duck-shaped”
woman to dig her grave, and finally, his promise to her has
been fulfilled. Cash is sent to the doctor,
and Darl-whom we discover set the fire in Gillespie’s barn
to put their outrageous journey to an end-is sent to the mental
asylum in Jackson to avoid the Bundrens being sued by Gillespie.
Vardaman looks in the store windows for the
toy train, but it was nowhere to be found. Dewey Dell finds a pharmacist
who says he will help her, but instead he tricks her into granting
him sexual favors. Anse convinces her to give him the ten dollars
(that Lafe had given her), which he uses to buy a new set of teeth.
As the novel ends, he re-appears before his family with the duck-shaped
woman-who happens to own a phonograph-and introduces her by saying,
“Meet Mrs. Bundren.”
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