Caddy Compson
Candace Compson is the second child and only daughter of Jason and Caroline Compson. Faulkner often referred to her character as his "heart's darling." Attractive, caring, active, in some respects braver and even more conventionally masculine than any of her brothers, she is nonetheless trapped inside a complex set of circumstances: her dysfunctional and very needy family, Southern codes of female respectability, and her own biology. During her adolescence she seems to turn to sex as a kind of refuge from these sources of frustration, but that results in her pregnancy, a desperate and failed marriage, an illegitimate daughter whom she knows she cannot take care of, and her mother's refusal to allow her back in the family home. After her wedding in April, 1910, she returns to Jefferson only rarely and briefly, but she is a constant and haunting presence in her brothers' minds. In a sense, her absence is the center of the novel.
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