Major de Spain
Beginning with "Wash" (1934), a least one "Major de Spain" appears in over a dozen Yoknapatawpha fictions - although only one of the two characters with that military title was a real Confederate major. The other, his son, inherited the title. Both father and son are powerful in Yoknapatawpha business and politics, wealthy planters with large land holdings, including the hunting camp where this story is set. In some of the texts - including this one - it is impossible to say for sure if the "Major de Spain" who appears is the father or the son. In the version of this story that is published as "The Bear" in Go Down, Moses (1942), Faulkner moved the timeline back a generation, making it definite that the novel's De Spain is the father. Based on the dates, however, it seems more likely that this story's De Spain is the son.
digyok:node/character/7499