Submitted by dotty.dye@asu.edu on Mon, 2012-05-14 17:08
One of the men standing around on Mrs. Littlejohn's lot the evening of the auction. He is the one who suggests that Ernest should track down Mrs. Armstid to tell her that her husband has been injured (177).
Submitted by dotty.dye@asu.edu on Mon, 2012-05-14 17:06
Bids on one of the Texas ponies that Flem brought to Frenchman's bend. Follows "his horse clean down to Samson’s Bridge, with a wagon and a camp outfit" (180).
Submitted by dotty.dye@asu.edu on Mon, 2012-05-14 16:56
Mrs. Tull is returning to Frenchman's Bend with her husband, her aunt and three daughters on a one-lane bridge when their wagon was overrun by one of the wild ponies.
Submitted by dotty.dye@asu.edu on Mon, 2012-05-14 16:45
A Frenchman's Bend farmer who reappears in a number of Faulkner's fiction, Vernon Tull arrives in this story just in time to be run over by Eck's pony while returning from town with his family of women. Tull holds on to his wagon's reins and is "drug" off the wagon and along the ground until they break (176).
Submitted by dotty.dye@asu.edu on Mon, 2012-05-14 16:35
A "Mrs. Bundren" is mentioned twice in the story by its narrator, Suratt, whose effort to sell her a sewing machine overlaps the appearance, auction and escape of the Texas horses. She never makes an appearance in the story, but presumably this is Addie Bundren, who plays such a major role in the novel As I Lay Dying, also published in 1931.
Submitted by dotty.dye@asu.edu on Mon, 2012-05-14 16:31
Flem Snopes' cousin to whom Flem turns over his clerking job at Jody Varner's store. I.O. admires his cousin and proudly "cackles, like a hen" at the way Flem swindles the men of Frenchman's Bend. I.O exclaims "You boys might just as well quit trying to get ahead of Flem" (181).
Submitted by dotty.dye@asu.edu on Mon, 2012-05-14 14:58
Eck Snopes young son, referred to as "Ad" by his father and as "Eck’s boy" by everyone else in the story, runs around trying to help his father catch their spotted pony. When the horse is trying to escape from Mrs. Littlejohn's boardinghouse, Ad stands "a yard tall maybe" and "that horse swoared over his head without touching a hair" (175).
Submitted by dotty.dye@asu.edu on Mon, 2012-05-14 14:50
The Armstid's oldest daughter, Ina May, is "about twelve" (178). She takes care of the rest of her siblings while Mrs. Armstid is shuttling back and forth to Mrs. Littlejohn's. According to Mrs. Armstid "Ina May bars the door" and keeps "the axe in bed with her" while her mother is away (179).