Unnamed Narrator
"A Bear Hunt" opens with this unnamed narrator, whose role is essentially to frame the first-person vernacular tale told by Ratliff that will be begin on the fourth page of the text. He provides some necessary background information about the story's characters and settings, including Ratliff and Lucius Provine, and the Indian mound and settlement. Although he tells us very little about himself, except to identify his family as "literate, town-bred people" (65), he appears to be an adult resident of Jefferson who, when he was fifteen, actually met some of the Chickasaws and spent a night on the Indian mound with another boy. Though unidentified in the magazine and Collected Stories versions of the story, in Faulkner’s revision of the story in Big Woods, the narrator identifies himself as General Compson's grandson, suggesting that he is Quentin Compson, whom Faulkner also uses as a first-person narrator in several other short stories in addition to his major appearances in The Sound and the Fury and Absalom, Absalom!.
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