Ike McCaslin
Isaac (Ike) McCaslin became one of Faulkner's best-known protagonists in "The Bear." In this magazine version of "Delta Autumn," he is mainly identified simply as "McCaslin" (268), and several times as "Uncle Ike" (267, 275). The complex family history that Faulkner gives him in Go Down, Moses is barely hinted at here. The story refers to his "father" as a Confederate soldier (273), and to his "wife and children" (274), all now dead. His true "home" is the wilderness in which he hunts each November (274), and it's clear that he wants to see the young men he accompanies on the hunting trips, "the sons and even the grandsons" of the men he first hunted with as his true 'children' (267, 274) - though the story is about how they betray the values he has tried to teach them. "Old McCaslin" (268) is nearly seventy, and his mood is elegaic. He realizes that he and the wilderness share a life span. When "what people called progress" had destroyed the big woods, he will also enter a "scope free of both time and space" (275). But by the end of the story he peace he hoped to find again in the woods is gone.
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