William Faulkner
1897-1962
◆
This video is an AI-generated active imagination of what might be said to us today based on the written historical record.
William Faulkner’s Barbaric Yawp
◆
I will yawp because the land itself yawps through me, this red clay memory-soaked republic, where the dust still carries the footsteps of the forgotten and the cries of those not yet born, and where the old sins rise again wearing new Sunday clothes as though a fresh coat of paint could hide their lineage.
I have walked your country's long shadow, that haunted corridor between what it remembers and what it refuses to remember, and I tell you, memory is a beast that will not die simply because you shut your eyes. It waits. It claws at the door. It returns. And I have seen how you, America, tremble before that ancient hunger to blame someone, anyone, for the dread coiled in your own heart.
How you reach again for a loud man who promises to lift the burden of self-knowledge from your shoulders.
So I yawp because the land is weary.
Weary of being sown with fear and reaped with hatred. Weary of the same old story written in a new hand, but in the same blood-dark ink.
You speak of greatness as if it can be shouted into existence. But greatness is no noise, no flag, no man with a microphone selling you back your own worst fears wrapped in paper labeled salvation.
Greatness, if it ever belonged to a nation, is a quiet, stubborn endurance, a willingness to walk into the hard truth even when it scolds. It is a refusal to trade compassion for the howling of the mob.
But the mob is rising again, rushing like floodwater down the ravines of the present, carrying every old hatred this land has ever birthed. The hatred that mutters in back rooms, the hatred that marches with torches, the hatred that calls cruelty strength and ignorance freedom.
And I yawp because I know, I have always known, that men who feed hatred are eaten by it first, and nations that bow to such men become little more than echo chambers where the same wound cries out through the centuries.
So hear me, America. This yawp is not a curse, but a reckoning, a call to remember the truth buried like a seed beneath your fear. The past is not dead. It is not even past. And unless you face it, confess it, redeem it, it will rise as it has risen now and devour you whole.
But there is still time. There is always time for a nation, like a man, to choose redemption over ruin.
So this is my yawp. Choose truth. Choose memory. Choose the painful, salvific work of knowing who you are before it is too late.
◆