In Barn Burning Sarty refers to himself as being pulled two ways between two teams of horses. Was Sarty right or wrong for the decision he made? There isn’t a right answer to that question. It all depends on the person’s personal morals. Sarty was in a rock and a hard place. Sarty became stuck in the dilemma of being pulled between two horses and betraying his family.
Sarty felt like he was being pulled between being loyal to his father and telling the truth. Sarty’s Father Abner, was very destructive and had a resentment against the owners. The family constantly had to move because Abner kept burning barns. “He could not see the table where the justice sat and before which his father and his father’s enemy (our enemy he thought in that despair; ourn! Mine and bisn both! He’s my father!) Stood, but he could hear them, the two of them that is, because his father had no word yet…” Sarty had to pay for all his dad mistakes, and it eventually got old. It’s not fair at all to basically get
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Did he save his family from his dad’s sins or make matters much worse? There are many sides and answers you could get to those two questions. Personally he didn’t betray his family, because at the end of the day his dad was doing wrong.” They ate supper by the lamp light, then, sitting on the doorsteps, the boy watched the night fully accomplish….and saw the altered light through the door were a candle stub now burned in a bottleneck on the table and his father, still in the hat coat...” Sarty did the right thing, and can definitely justify his choice. It wasn’t even about him betraying them, it was more of him protecting his family from his dad’s sins. He didn’t look back in the end because he felt like he had made the right decision. Just think if Sarty didn’t stand up for what was right his father would continue be deviant. It was also a lesson for Sarty on how he could be better for himself in the