Bayad's maturity by Faulkner's "unfinished William Faulkner" conveys his novel "unfinished" through the eyes and ears of Bayard's son, Federal Colonel John Satorius. In such a turbulent era in American history, the author used a little boy who allowed him to see events from a unique point of view. Bayard has dual functions as a character and a narrator in the novel. The character of Bayard has grown into a young adult in the workplace and Bayard of the talker tells the story of the story after many years.
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.
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 Faulkner 's sensitive men. (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 most of a novel to the lives of civilians during the Civil War but it is considered a small man growing because it details the life from Bayard's childish boy to a young man. Faulkner gradually indicated to the reader that the Boyeard has changed from a boy who was afraid of the grandmother's punishment to a law school graduate with a clear expression. As Faulkner captures the thoughts and emotions most adults remember about their youth, Unququished describes a scenario where readers can move over time. He showed how adult adults like Bayard's grandmother teach courses to vulnerable children and how to teach people how to make decisions and destroy lives. Bayard Sartoris became a man, he exceeded his father's level.