Cash comes to the hill, limping where he fell off of the church. He looks down at the spring, then up the road and back toward the barn. He comes down the path stiffly and looks at the broken hitch-rein and at the dust in the road and then up the road, where the dust is gone. "I hope they've got clean past Tull's by now. Introduction: As I Lay Dying is a novel written by William Faulkner who was an American Novelist. He wrote many master pieces. He wrote novels, stories, and essays. His work has greatly served the literature and his books are still read by people. Though all the book he has written are good but As I Lay Dying is a master pieces. In the first part of As I Lay Dying, Darl reveals that Addie whipped and petted Jewel more than the other children, and, in turn, Jewel treats his horse the same way. Jewel suffocates his horse to control him, and when he finally gets him under control, he punches the horse and swears at him. Jewel loves and pets his horse, but treats him The man mentions the smell of Addie’s corpse. The man tries to steal Jewel’s horse. The man tries to seduce Dewey Dell. The man is tailgating the Bundrens’ wagon. Jul 26, 2013 · Faulkner wrote As I Lay Dying in six weeks while working nights at a power plant.It was his seventh novel, published in 1930 when he was 33 (he died in 1962, and was awarded the Nobel Prize for Jewel's Horse. Jewel 's relationship with his horse symbolizes his willful decision to separate himself from the rest of the Bundren family. Of course, Jewel is not biologically a Bundren child; however, he deliberately emphasizes his desire… read analysis of Jewel's Horse. In William Faulkner's As I Lay Dying Addie Bundren is also subject to the determining natural and social forces. The hot, "dead air", combined with the misfortune of marrying an unloving husband, has rendered both communication and love impossible for Addie (As I Lay Dying,1957:58). She cannot derive strength from her husband since he As I Lay Dying revolves around many themes and plots, the main plot being the death and burial of Addie Bundren, however she is not the main narrator. Faulkner chose several different narrators, which results in fragmentation and overlapping of several points of view sometimes narrating the same events. Analysis. Dewey Dell enters the Jefferson pharmacy when MacGowan is on duty. Since he finds Dewey Dell to be "a pretty hot mamma for a country girl," MacGowan decides to lie and pretend to be a doctor. She tells him her situation, and he comforts her, while telling her that ten dollars is not enough to get the operation. Analysis. Anse complains about how hard his life is as a farmer and laments that "nowhere in this sinful world can a honest, hardworking man profit." He hopes for a reward in heaven, where all men are equal. Again, Anse demonstrates his self-interest and his tendency to see himself as a victim for things that go wrong for him. VHOmpDf.