As I Lay Dying       William Faulkners As I Lay Dying is a novel   about how the   impertinent agendas within a family tear it   apart. Every member of the family is to a degree responsible   for what goes wrong, but none more than Anse. Anses     acedia and selfishness are the underlying factors to every   disaster in the book. As the critic Andre Bleikasten agrees,   "there is scarcely a character in Faulkner so loaded with   faults and vices" (84). At twenty-two Anse becomes sick   from  whole shebang in the sun after which he refuses to work   claiming he will die if he ever breaks a  elbow grease again.

    Anse   becomes lazy, and  deliberates Addie into a baby factory in order   to  turn in children to do all the work. Addie is inbittered by   this, and is  neer the same. Anse is begrudging of everything.    crimson the  hail of a doctor for his dying wife seems  gold    crack spent on false teeth to him. "I never sent for you"   Anse says "I take you to witness I never sent for you" (37)   he repeats...If you want to get a  copious essay, order it on our website: 
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