Carelessly, inspired by a terrible ignorant war boy comparing Barnard Sartorius of Faulkner's "Unconsquered" and Bernard Sartoris of Plato's Republic of "Unfinished" of William Faulkner, in any situation, a wise youth is a murderer I notice that I am wrong. His transformation is similar to the transformation of a caveman in the Republic of Plato. Beard Saltris crosses Plato's cave and discovers the truth and kindness at the end of the novel.
BAYARD SARTORIS WILLIAM In the first interrelated story of FAULKNER, the boys "unwelcome" and "Ambuscade" grew from adolescence to adolescence. He is the son of Colonel John Saltris, and in many stories he is struggling with the civil war. When Bernard tried to retaliate against the death of Miss Rosa Milard and then refused to revenge her father's death, he completely ignored the vengeance code required by the traditional southern tradition, I did it. He has also become one of the sensitive men of Faulkner. And that person was attracted, but refused to attract women's attention. (See "GAVIN STEVENS.") In "Smell of Verbena", Bayard refused attention of young widow DRUSILLA H AWKE. "BEAR, THE" William Faulkner (1942)
Facts about companions of American short story document, 2nd edition (literary series companion)
The Unvanquished is a novel written by American writer William Faulkner in 1938, located in York Napatafa County. It tells the story of the Sartoris family who first appeared in the novel Sartoris (or the flag in the dust). Unanswered things happened before that story and occurred during the American Civil War. The main characters are Baird Saltris, John Saltris (Merce John, Father), Grandma, Apple (Molengo), Absnoop, Cousin Dorsyla, Aunt Jenny, Louvinia and Lieutenant (Yankee Soldier). Seven episodes ranging from 1862 to 1873 - sometimes next to each other, separated by month or year - and ordinary stories are heard. This book starts with Bayard Sartoris playing in the mud of Sartoris plantation and his slave friend Ringo. The slaves named Losh closely interrupted their game near their Jefferson town, suggesting that allied troops entered the northeastern part of the Mississippi River.
In the beginning, most of the unconquired Faulkner called an innocent child Bayard, but in the end he referred to a middle-aged man, Bayard Sartorius. This shows that he mature and acquired the name Sartoris. Bayard chased grandmother's murderer from a child who played a war game into a brave teenager, and finally he refused violence and became a gentleman who follows honor and law. This change from innocence to maturity is common in all societies and is the foundation of the "untreated" story.