Ahhh, Darl. My thoughts on him have definitely changed a bit, and I've come to... understand(?) him a little better. The beginning of As I Lay Dying gave Darl a mysterious aura. He became a "supernatural" character that was able to see life in a different perspective. However, although this "power" and strange (slightly odd) ability seemed cool at first, my thoughts quickly evolved.
The first instance where Darl's peculiarity seemed off was when Anse told him off for laughing, saying that's why people thought he was odd; Darl would have a strange way of laughing inappropriately. And I first though, "Oh, it's just Anse being a lil sensitive and annoying. Darl is doing no harm. I'm still going to be a fan of Darl, besides what Anse or any other character thinks." But I looked past my fond curiosity of Darl, and realized, I (begrudgingly) kind of sort of agreed with Anse. It does kind of unnerve me when someone starts laughing inappropriately, especially if they've just spouted some odd ramblings about God-knows-what. Or if they have a tendency to stare into my soul and somehow figure out all of my secrets; actually Anse pointing out Darl's odd laughing spell changed my thoughts on Darl, made them slightly more negative/unsure about his character.
And then the plot goes crazy (well, this whole book's been a bit out there), and Darl gets hauled off to a mental institute and his narrations go haywire. His third-person narrative doesn't try to disguise itself as first-person anymore. Darl straight up goes third/first/third/whatever he wants with his new unleashed mental tone. And although Darl's now unpredictable and a little kooky/eerie, I do still really like him. He's unique, and definitely an unforgettable character.
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Current blog for Coming of Age 2017
(Former blog for Hero's Journey 2016)
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And remember that Darl is laughing uncontrollably as they carry him away to Jackson . . .
ReplyDeleteIn the first instance, it's definitely revealing that Anse makes this comment about how stuff like this makes folks "talk" about Darl, but he's also understandably a bit peevish (more than usual!) at this moment. Jewel is riding up on his horse, in blatant defiance of his father's wishes (and what he insists his mother's wishes would have been), and Darl is laughing with glee, almost cheering Jewel on (not that Jewel wants or cares about his support). It's one more "insult" that poor Anse has to endure, and it irks him.
You make a good point about how Darl becomes stranger and stranger throughout the novel, but this raises the question of his reliability at the beginning. It was very easy to take all of his 3rd person omniscient narration as fact when it made sense and he seemed sane. But, now that we know he is not really sane, can was trust what he said while we thought he wasn't totally crazy?
ReplyDeleteYeah, I was right there with you in the pro-Darl camp at the beginning, but then when he burned down the barn you start to think maybe he is actually insane. I think its the perspectives thing; we're outraged for Darl when other people talk bad about him because we're aligned with the Bundrens, but by the end we're forced to acknowledge that our perspective may have clouded our judgement and all the neighbors were right about him.
ReplyDeleteWhenever I start reading a book, I immediately side with some characters and Darl was one of them. So when we find out that he (intentionally?) burned down the barn, I was really shocked. I think that the fact that Darl was such a good narrator in comparison to the rest of them lessened the "weirdness" that we saw a lot more of later in the novel. But the image of him laughing as he is sent off to Jackson is super jarring.
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