Jefferson: a town of “gaunt” faces (Light in August Ch. 1 – 7)

Gaunt – adjective

  1. (of a person) lean and haggard, especially because of suffering, hunger, or age.

In the first third of Light in August, readers are introduced to characters with faces that are insufferable, frozen, tight, grave, and perhaps the most recurring descriptor of them all, gaunt (32, 63, 69, 79, 89). Naturally, this leads me to raise a question with regard to the denizens of the novel’s hub: why the long faces?

As things would appear, there’s a lot more to Jefferson and its inhabitants than meets the untrained eye.

One of the most resonant themes in the novel presents itself in the Jeffersonian’s association of blackness with heathens. Indeed, the townsfolk cause a dramatic scene on minister Hightower’s premises on the notion “that he had that negro woman in the house alone with him all day” (71) blaming her for the suicide of his wife while the matron of the white orphanage expresses shocked disbelief at the knowledge that they’d been housing a black orphan and urgency to send him away. Even that very same orphan, Joseph Christmas, suggests the undoing of his foster father would be the knowledge that “he has nursed a nigger beneath his own roof” (169) and he is hunted after for the death of Mrs. Burden simply on the basis that “he’s got nigger blood in him” (98).

Black characters in the novel are persecuted when they are found out and as a result, bystanders are rendered sullen and droopy-faced as they are inevitably entangled in the society’s racist ideology just as German civilians during a Naziist regime.

Perhaps the most revealing character to examine for this phenomenon of widespread gauntness is Joseph Christmas. We are introduced to the character when he first steps on the scene in Jefferson’s mill community in raggedy clothes and upon closer examination, Byron describes that, “his face was gaunt, the flesh a level dead parchment color” (34).

When thinking about where Joseph’s gauntness comes from, it’s important to remember that the closest he had to any sort of tender loving figure was Alice who was torn away from him at a tender age of three. While Mrs. McEachern tries to take on that substitutive role as a nurturing foster mother, Joseph mentally and physically cannot bring himself to accept her caring even making a display of flipping her tray of food over and eating the scraps after she departs the room (155).

When I think of the type of gaunt face that Joseph bears, I think of a weathered face that has suffered lack of love and excessive physical labor, so much so that it even stands apart from the weathered faces of millworkers. Minister HIghtower is also described as having a long face and oddly enough “gaunt shoulders” (79) but when I think what weighs down his features, I think moreso about how he suffers the mental burden of painful knowledge such as that of his wife’s death or his dead grandfather. This sense of burden carries over when he begins thinking about how Lena, the one person who comes bursting on the scene without a trouble to boot, will fare amidst the troubled faces in the small world of Jefferson.

I do want to close on some questions that stood out to me. When the town (Jefferson) recounts the tale of Hightower refusing to evacuate town and the townsfolk lobbing accusations at him, the passage reads: “that was all it required: that idea, that single idle word blown from mind to mind” (71). What words came to your mind when you read that section? What sentiment do you think passes from person to person when a tragedy like the suicide of his wife occurs? Can you connect this moment to the one where Christmas is chased down for murdering Burden?

Dead Folks CreateThe Most Damage

The town situated in Light in August is controlled/ran on purely through rumors and gossips. Similarly, to both As I Lay Dying and The Sound and the Fury, the people and the town, as a whole, are unable to move forward because everyone is fixated on past events, particularly on “the others”, Joe Christmas and Joe Brown, Joanna Burden, and Reverend Gail Hightower. On page 75, as Hightower questions Byron’s addiction to work at the mill, Byron answers, “I don’t know, I reckon that’s just my life… It is because a fellow is more afraid of the trouble he might have than he ever is of the trouble he’s already got. He’ll cling to trouble he’s used to before he’ll risk a change. Yes. A man will talk about how he’d like to escape from living folks. But it’s the dead folks that do him the damage. It’s the dead ones that lay quiet in one place and don’t try to hold him, that he cant escape from.” This passage I believe perfectly deconstructs the town’s manipulation for control through its usage of rumors and its isolation of others they view unfitting. The town metaphorically is considered “dead” since the town is unable to accept new changes and cannot identify with foreign ideas/ behaviors. The town and its people are also unable to forego past events such as the death of Hightower’s wife and overlook/ reaccept Hightower back into its community. Without the construction of rumors the town cannot function, it does not survive through capital received by the mills, but by the town’s desire to apprehend everything about each person’s past. The town’s identity is to be omniscient while obscuring the “other’s” identities. The town’s particular isolation of Joanna Burden and Joe Christmas are due to their affectionate behavior towards black people and their desire to challenge the town’s policy. Mrs. Burden’s isolation occurred from her parent’s desire to aid the blacks, but by Mrs. Burden hiring black works, it led to rumors and then complete isolation (53). The idea of what a black person signifies to the town is captured by the marshal’s inability to depart from the idea of Christmas possibly being black. The marshal immediately concludes Christmas is the murderer once his ethnicity is exposed and relieves Brown of questioning, “A nigger, I always thought there was something funny about that fellow… Well, I believe you are telling the truth at last. You go on Buck, now, get a good sleep. I’ll attend to Christmas”(98-99). This further reveals the church and the dependency of capital by the mill does not dictate the town’s actions, but through the town’s narrow minded views on race, identity, and inability for change. Typically, churches are depicted as the omniscient marker in a town, but by Reverend Gail Hightower’s denouncement as a reverend and his isolation from the town due to gossips formulated about his wife on pages 62-65, this indicates as well, the superiority of gossip and inability to accept new ideas.

Furthermore, the rumors constructed by the town are false, unreliable, and biased which are revealed in the conversations between Byron and Hightower. One rumor that is constructed on page 59 states, “No one has entered Hightower’s house in twenty-five years”, we know is false because Byron visits daily to converse/gossip with him. Hightower’s role in the novel is as a spectator. Isolated from the community, he is unable to be manipulated, to believe the rumors by the town are true, and questions the gossip Byron tells him (59). As Byron gossips to Hightower, the reader is able to catch a glimpse of Byron’s ordeal with identity. He’s stuck between being part of the town, its love for rumors and gossip, and as an “outsider”, excluding himself from the rumors and gossip. Though Byron is able to comprehend the rumors and gossips constructed by the town are false, he is so keen in not being excluded by the town that he works six days a week at the mill (75), but occasionally visits Hightower. On pages 73and 74 are two moments when Byron reveals the falsity of the rumors and gives his own perspective. Byron’s perspective of the town as stated, “…the entire affair had been a lot of people performing a play and that now at last they played out the parts which been allotted them and now they could live quietly with one another” (73). Also, he mentions, “He believed that the town had had the habit of saying things about the disgraced minister which they did not believe themselves, for too long a time to break themselves of it. “Because always’, he think, ‘when anything get to be a habit, it also manages to get a right good distance from truth and fact’ (74). From those two passages, I believe Faulkner may incorporate the South’s inability for change and its refusal to accept the loss of the Civil War into the novel. The character’s labeled as “outsiders” may symbolize the change forced onto the town while the town is indicative of the South’s internment of denial and refusal for change thus the reason the town chooses to live in the past by gossiping. Which leads me to believe the two passages foreshadows either the downfall of the town or the “outsiders” who perceive the town as their home. Overall, I believe the subplots within the book will come together with Byron as the main character who pieces together the significance of each character, Lena Grove, Hightower, Christmas, Brown, and Joanna Burden to one another.