Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 2012-04-03 10:48
The Confederate officer who prevents J.E.B. Stuart from following Carolina Bayard on his reckless quest for anchovies by reminding him of his duty to the army.
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 2012-04-03 10:48
One of the Confederate officers who rides with J.E.B. Stuart; it is on his horse that the captured Union Major is carried. (He does not seem to be related in any way to the Wyatt sisters who lives near the Benbows in Jefferson.)
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 2012-04-03 10:48
One of the blacks who sharecrops on the Sartoris estate; the possum hunt that Bayard and Narcissa go on with Caspey and Isom begins behind his cabin. ("Unc" is almost certainly short for "uncle," the familiar but demeaning label that was regularly affixed on many black male characters in the South, and more than once in Faulkner's fictions.)
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 2012-04-03 10:48
Manfred von Richthofen, better known as "The Red Baron," shot down more planes than any other aviator in World War I. Young Bayard tells his grandfather and great-great-aunt that the German pilot who shot down Johnny was a "pupil of Richthofen's" (43).
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 2012-04-03 10:48
Referred to by Monaghan as "that big Irish devil" (387), Comyn was Royal Air Force flyer (identified in "Ad Astra" as a lieutenant) with whom Young Bayard and Johnny Sartoris flew during World War I.
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 2012-04-03 10:48
Dr. Straud is New York surgeon and medical researcher with whom Dr. Peabody's son, Lucius Jr., works. The novel says his "name is a household word" (400), and Lucius says the doctor has "been experimenting with electricity" (401).
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 2012-04-03 10:48
Watts doesn't appear in the novel as a character, but his name appears when Virgil Bearch tells Byron that the air rifle he covets is for sale at "Watts' hardware store" (108). So it seems safe to say that Watts owns Jefferson's hardware store - though in Faulkner's next novel, The Sound and the Fury, the store belongs to a man named Earl, and later texts it will belong to Ike McCaslin.
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 2012-04-03 10:48
He was Colonel Sartoris' partner in building the railroad through Yoknapatawpha until they fell out; after Sartoris defeated him in an election in 1876, Redlaw shot and killed him on the street in front of the courthouse. His name changes to "Ben Redmond" in The Unvanquished, where he also plays a larger role.
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 2012-04-03 10:48
The woman who owns the boarding house in Jefferson where the two Freedmen's Bureau Agents are staying; according to Will Falls' story about the event, she stands "gapin' after him with her mouth open" when Colonel Sartoris goes up to their room and shoots them both (243).