Unnamed Children of Pioneers and Indians
Character Key Number:
3141
Display Name:
Unnamed Children of Pioneers and Indians
Sort Name:
Unnamed Children of Pioneers and Indians
Ever Present in Yoknapatawpha?:
Yes
Biography:
According to the history of Jackson in Requiem for a Nun, "the Anglo-Saxon" pioneer not only fought the Indians he found in the territory; he also fathered children on some of them: "scattering his ebullient seed in a hundred dusky bellies through a thousand miles of wilderness" (81-82). "Dusky bellies" is ambiguous, but almost certainly refers to Indian women. And while miscegenation between black and white in Faulkner's world made one a 'Negro' and socially inferior, it was common for 'white' southerners to boast of a Native American ancestor on the family tree.