Lucius "Luke" Provine
A major character in the story, the man whom the frame narrator calls "Lucius" and Ratliff calls "Luke" Provine is a hanger-on at the hunting camp who is suffering from a persistent case of hiccups and who becomes the butt of a practical joke when he goes to a nearby Indian mound to seek a cure for it. A "tall, apparently strong and healthy man . . . who makes no effort whatever to support his wife and three children" (64), he is described by the narrator at the beginning of the story as forty and almost toothless, as well as violent, shiftless and boozy. Twenty years earlier he was notorious in the region as the leader of a "gang" of delinquents; one of the gang's actions in that past gives rise to the story's main events. (In almost every respect this character seems identical with the character of Lucius Hogganbeck, who appears in 3 other texts - and in Faulkner’s revision of "A Bear Hunt" story for Big Woods, he renamed the character "Lucius Hogganbeck.")
digyok:node/character/14123