Road to the Delta in Go Down, Moses (Location)

Location Key: 
Display Label: 
Road to the Delta
Map Icon: 
OutOfYoknapatawpha
Authority : 
Text (when unambiguous)
Other Texts Location Appears In: 
X: 
2325
Y: 
340
Description: 

The 200-mile trip that the hunters take from Yoknapatawpha to their camp in the Delta gives Faulkner an opportunity to describe the interior of Mississippi in both spatial and temporal terms. Geographically, the they travel from the "cradling hills" in the east (324) to the "rich unbroken alluvial flatness" of the vast flood plain along the Mississippi River (319). And as Ike travels past the "little countless towns," the "tremendous [cotton] gins" (325) and the occasional Indian burial mounds that dot the land, he thinks of the decades during which the white planters who "owned" the land and "the negroes who worked it" (324) and cleared "cotton patches which as the years passed became fields and plantations" (323-4), and the landscape's transition as "paths made by deer and bear became roads and then highways, with towns in turn springing up along them and along the rivers Tallahatchie and Sunflower, which joined and became the Yazoo" (324).

Role: 
Site of Event
Status: 
Continuous
Types: 
Country Road; Plantation; Cotton Gin|Cotton Compress; Town; River; Indian Mound

digyok:node/location/10011