There are many different conflicts throughout the entire story. Faulkner’s decision to include many events that do not relate at the beginning helps form the main conflicts that occur in the middle of the story. Near the middle, the characters and their internal …show more content…
Wash’s conflict with Sutpen worsens as soon as his granddaughter, Molly, has a baby girl. Once she is born, Wash believes he has a chance at inheriting the plantation as soon as Sutpen dies. He does everything to try and get close to Sutpen. Wash begins to realize who the real Sutpen is and his internal conflict of hatred shows. “‘You said if she was a mare, you could give her a good stall in the stable’” (6). Wash gets angry after Sutpen gives his new colt a better stable than Molly. In result, he decides to kill him. His internal conflict gives him the decision of burning the house down with his grand-daughter and her daughter in it, which is an external conflict as a …show more content…
It is focused around his life on the plantation. The author first presents Wash as “a gaunt, malaria-ridden man with pale, questioning eyes, who looked about thirty-five” (1). Even when Wash is called white trash by the slaves and is treated terribly by Sutpen, he makes sure not to let it show. Instead of fighting back to the Negros and attacking them, he takes the harsh comments and gets on with his life. “…sometimes he rushed at them, snatching up a stick from the ground while they scattered before him, yet seeming to surround him still with that black laughing, derisive, evasive, inescapable, leaving him panting and impotent and raging” (2). Wash is the kind of person that keeps his feelings inside and is very