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Faulkner’s River of Time

2023-04-19 05:27:12

William Faulkner considers time to be purely subjective, violent and turbulent, but it brings hope and redemption. Time is the most important (because it embodies the study of modernism of the medium, not the purpose), and it is decisive to understand human attitudes towards the world. This is the result of Faulkner's time, he asked it to rush out Kaeti by his novel "Sound and Fury" leaving it to the venti and rush out the life of Compson's brothers and sisters . "Neutral ... I do not see my eyes ... I explored" I lost my past, I did not know the future. Move Quentin in the direction of "oblivion" and let Jason find endless anger in Jason. It is p

Fury, the name of the second movement, reminds me of the novel of William Faulkner (1897-1962) and the confusion of the Mississippi River in the history of the Great Flood of Mississippi in 1927. Just as shocking time changed in Faulkner's 1927 novel. Sound and anger, music I created includes discordant harmony, turbulent multilism, and collision between simultaneous 3/4 and 5/4 time signature. Prayer, third movement, I meditate on the rest of the Mississippi River from the height, overlooking the water, as long as the eyes can see, the sunset changes to a fine night sky. Carillon, vibraphone, bell and piano are like 'distant' like a distant church bell, but the big ones play lyrical and affectionate melodies. In music flashback, I recall the material from the first movement, reminding me of the eternal trend of the Mississippi River.

William Faulkner used the Mississippi River and Delta as his hunting scene in his novel. In Faulkner's famous story "Bear", it was suggested that young Ike began to turn into a man first and abandoned his birthright through realization of his discovery in the forest around the Mississippi River. I landed in York Napatafa County. Morris, Christopher. Big Roach: The environmental history of the Mississippi River and its surroundings covering 300 pages from Hernando de Soto to Hurricane Katrina (Oxford University Press; 2012), the increasingly humanized river drought, illnesses and Flood connected