preview

How Does Sarty Change

Decent Essays

Even though young Sarty despises his father’s (Abner) crimes, why does he keep these crimes to himself and not expose his father? Throughout the text of “Barn Burning”, Sarty seems to have repetitive feelings of grief and despair, yet he hesitates to out his father for his crimes. Sarty is hesitant to out his father for his crimes because he hopes his father will change, he fears his father will harm him physically or emotionally, and he places a priority on his family’s wellbeing before his own. First, Sarty hesitates to reveal his father’s crimes to others because he hopes that his father may change. Sarty is hoping that his father will change, but without him having to act against his father. This can be seen when Sarty is astonished by the gargantuan house of Mr. De Spain. There, Sarty thinks; “‘Maybe he will feel it too. Maybe it will even change him now from what maybe he couldn’t help but be.’” (Faulkner, 40) He wants his father to change because he is tired of the life that his father is making him and his family live. Sarty and his family have moved 12 times within the past year. Each move, based on the past two moves, is more than likely based off the fact that Sarty’s father has either burned another barn or damaged someone else’s property again. Plus, on top of that, Abner never seems to get his family out of this pit of despair. It’s a never-ending cycle. Although Sarty is trying to convince himself that his father will change without force, his father’s

Get Access