Dilsey / Seminar Comments
The final chapter of The Sound and the Fury is narrated in the third person, told from the point of view of Dilsey. This narration style of having Dilsey's point of view throughout the chapter makes reading the chapter easier to understand. It is direct and straightfoward, which is a nice break for reading considering the difficulty and the ambiguous feelings that came with the first chapters. Each chapter is increasingly put together to make sense and easy to understand. First, Benjy is mentally disabled, and he can't tell the difference between past or present, which makes the reader confused as to which time period he is referring to. Despite this, he gives a fairly direct truthful state of narration of the characters in the story because he is able to only tell us what happens without mixing it up with how he feels. Next, Quentin looses his sanity throughout the chapter and ultimately kills himself. He is under immense amounts of pressure from his parents at Harvard, and...