1866: Sutpen 'throws Rosa over'
If he threw her over, I wouldn't think she would want to tell anybody about it Quentin said. Ah Mr Compson said again (p46)
1864-1865: Goodhue dies in the attic; Rosa moves out to Sutpen's Hundred
Ah Mr Compson said again After Mr Coldfied died in '64, Miss Rosa moved out to Sutpen's Hundred to live with Judith. (p46) That's what she would have been expected to do. But she didn't. . . . Miss Rosa didn't go out there at once. (p68)
1845: Rosa born; her mother dying in childbirth, she is raised by a 'spinster aunt'
She (Miss Rosa) was born in 1845, with her sister already seven years married and the mother of two children and Miss Rosa born into her parents' middleage (her mother must have been at least forty and she died in that childbed and Miss Rosa never forgave her father for it) . . . she was born, at the price of her mother's life and never to be permitted to forget it, and raised by the same spinster aunt who tried to force not only the elder sister's bridegroom but the wedding too down the throat of a town which did not want it, (p46)
1838: Sutpen's illegitimate biracial daughter Clytie born a slave
(Yes, Clytie was his daughter too: Clytemnestra. He named her himself. He named them all himself: all his own get and all the get of his wild niggers after the country began to assimilate them. Miss Rosa didn't tell you that two of the niggers in the wagon that day were women? No, sir Quentin said. (p48)
1833: Sutpen has a son, 'the one before Clytie and Henry and Judith'
Yes. He named Clytie as he named them all, the one before Clytie and Henry and Judith even, with that same robust and sardonic temerity, naming with his own mouth his own ironic fecundity of dragon's teeth which with the two exceptions were girls. (p48)
1855: Rosa's aunt elopes with a "horse- and mule-trader"
until the night the aunt climbed our the window and vanished) (p50) when she eloped with the horse- and mule-trader (p59)
1859: Henry enrolls at 'the State University' in Oxford
what with Henry away at the State University at Oxford (p52)
1865: Charles Bon dies
Even if Charles Bon had not died, she would in all probability have gone out to Sutpen's Hundred to live after her father's death sooner or later (p53)
1859: Henry brings Charles Bon, of New Orleans, home with him from college at Christmas vacation
after he had brought Charles Bon home with him for Christmas (p55)
1860: in the summer, Bon visits Sutpen's Hundred while Sutpen is in New Orleans; Rosa offers to sew Judith's "trousseau"
the summer following Henry's first year at the University, . . . he had brought Charles Bon home with him . . . again to spend a week or so of the summer vacation before Bon rode on to the River to take the steamboat home to New Orleans; the summer in which Sutpen himself went away, on business, Ellen said, told, doubtless unaware, such was her existence then, that she did not know where her husband had gone and not even conscious that she was not curious, and no one but your grandfather and perhaps Clytie ever to know that Sutpen had gone to New Orleans too. (p55)
1862: Ellen Coldfield Sutpen dies
dying in bed in a darkened room in the house on which fateful mischance had already laid its hand to the extent of scattering the black foundation on which it had been erected and removing its two male mainstays, husband and son (p61) And Ellen was not visible (she seemed to have retired to the darkened room which she was not to quit until she died two years later) . . . (p62) Ellen was dead two years now . . . in bewildered and uncomprehending amazement . . . the same almost plump soft (though now unringed) hands on the coverlet, and only the bafflement in the dark uncomprehending eyes to indicate anything of present life by which to postulate approaching death as she asked the seventeen-year-old sister . . . to protect the remaining child. (pp66-67)
1860: Christmas Eve, Sutpen forbids Bon's marriage to Judith; Henry renounces his father and leaves with Bon
And then something happened. . . . the tale came through the negroes: of how on the night before Christmas there had been a quarrel between, not Bon and Henry or Bon and Sutpen, but between the son and the father and that Henry had formally adjured his father and renounced his birthright and the roof under which he had been born and that he and Bon had ridden away in the night and that the mother was prostrate - though, the town believed, not at the upset of the marriage but at the shock of reality entering her life: (p62)
1861: after Mississippi secedes, Sutpen rides to war as second in command of Colonel Sartoris' regiment
when Mississippi seceded and when the first Confederate uniforms began to appear in Jefferson where Colonel Sartoris and Sutpen were raising the regiment which departed in '61, with Sutpen, second in command, riding at Colonel Sartoris' left hand, on the black stallion named out of Scott, beneath the regimental colors which he and Sartoris had designed and which Sartoris' womenfolks had sewed together out of silk dresses. (p63)
1861: Goodhue Coldfield shuts himself in attic to protest South's secession and Civil War
the four years which she had spent feeding her father secretly at night while he hid from Confederate provost marshals in the attic (p53) that man who was later to nail himself in his attic and starve to death rather than look upon his native land in the throes of repelling an invading army - (p47) That night he mounted to the attic with his hammer and his handful of nails and nailed the door behind him and threw the hammer out the window. (p65)
1864: Sutpen's slaves 'follow the Yankee troops away'; Judith, Clytie and Wash Jones remain at Sutpen's Hundred
since all of Sutpen's negroes had deserted also to follow the Yankee troops away; (p67) Though Judith was an orphan too, yet Judith still had those abandoned acres to draw from, let alone Clytie to help her, keep her company, and Wash Jones to feed her as Wash had fed Ellen before she died.
1861: Henry and Bon enlist as privates 'in the company their classmates at the university had organized'
Perhaps Ellen did not know before she died that Henry and Bon were now privates in the company which their classmates at the University had organised. (p69)