Go Down, Moses, a collection of seven stories by William Faulkner, first published in 1942 as a novel under the inaccurate title Go Down, Moses, and Other Stories; the title was corrected for the second printing. Set in Faulkner’s fictional Yoknapatawpha county, the book contains some of the author’s best writing.
The voices of Faulkner’s South—black and white, comic and tragic—ring through this sprawling tale of the McCaslin clan. The tone ranges from the farcical to the profound. As the title suggests, the stories are rife with biblical themes. Although the seven stories were originally published separately, Go Down, Moses is best read as a novel of interconnecting generations, races, and dreams.
The first story, “Was,” is considered a comic masterpiece. It opens with a raucous fox chase that suggests the theme and action of the story. Buck and Buddy, twin sons of Carothers McCaslin, chase their slave and half-brother, Turl; Turl chases his girlfriend Tennie, slave of Hubert and his sister Sibbey Beauchamp; and Sibbey, the only white woman in the countryside, pursues Buck. A poker game decides the fate of the couples and ownership of the slaves. “The Fire and the Hearth” establishes the dignity of Lucas Beauchamp, son of Turl and Tennie. “Pantaloon in Black,” the story of a black man lynched for killing a deceitful white, has little relation to the other stories but echoes their themes of love, loss, and racial tension. “The Old People” and “The Bear” feature Ike McCaslin’s confrontations with nature. In “Delta Autumn,” Ike, at age 79, is forced to confront his role in perpetuating the exploitation of his own black relatives. In the final story, “Go Down, Moses,” Faulkner focuses not on inner family struggles but on the entire community.