Europe in Sanctuary (Location)

Twice in the novel Horace tells himself that "when this is over, I'll go to Europe" (134, see also 260). He isn't more specific, and in fact the novel makes it clear that in the end he goes back to Belle. But his evocation of Europe as a place to escape to is an interesting twist on the way so many other inhabitants of Yoknapatawpha see 'Texas' as a place of refuge.

Africa in Light in August (Location)

The only time "Africa" is mentioned in the novel, it's as an adjective and as a figure to suggest the absolute racial difference between 'white' and 'African': according to the narrative, the white man whom Joe finds sitting on Bobbie's bed might have been Max's brother, "in the sense that any two white men strayed suddenly into an African village might look like brothers to them who live there" (214).

The Reivers , 94 (Event)

94

Unnamed Confederate Cavalry

This is the "party of horsemen" who, led by the brother of Nathan Bedford Forrest, rode their horses "into the lobby" of the Gayoso Hotel in Memphis and, according to Lucius, "almost captured a Yankee general" (94). Lucius does not say more about the cavalrymen, except that they included the Priest family's "remote" kinsman Theophilus McCaslin (94).

Unnamed Confederate Cavalry 5

This is the "party of horsemen" mentioned by Lucius in The Reivers that was led by the brother of Nathan Bedford Forrest; they rode their horses "into the lobby" of the Gayoso Hotel in Memphis and, according to Lucius, "almost captured a Yankee general" (94). Lucius does not say more about the cavalrymen, except that they included the Priest family's "remote" kinsman Theophilus McCaslin (94).

The Reivers , 94 (Event)

94

Unnamed Jefferson Lawyers

These men appear in the novel in absentia as part of the explanation of how Otis Meadowfill ended up "choosing [Gavin] Stevens from among the other Jefferson lawyers" (367). As a county seat and the site of a federal courthouse, Jefferson presumably had quite a number of lawyers throughout its history.

Unnamed Jefferson Lawyers

These men appear in absentia in The Mansion as part of the explanation of how Otis Meadowfill ended up "choosing [Gavin] Stevens from among the other Jefferson lawyers" (367). As a county seat and the site of a federal courthouse, Jefferson presumably had quite a number of lawyers throughout its history.

Unnamed Italian Marble Syndicate

This vague "Italian marble syndicate" is identified as the only group( or person) who had ever sold Flem "anything as amorphous as prestige" (358). The reference is to the monument and medallion that Flem erects on Eula's grave in The Town. Whether "marble syndicate" includes the craftsmen who worked with the marble, or just to the executives who managed the transaction, isn't clear.

Unnamed Italian Marble Syndicate

Italian marble appears in Yoknapatawpha in 4 different Yoknapatawpha fictions: the marble tombstones Sutpen has made for himself and Ellen are imported from Italy in Absalom!; the marble columns for the rebuilt courthouse in Requiem for a Nun are too; and so is the marble medallion that Gavin Stevens and Linda Snopes order for Eula's monument in The Town, or the monument itself, referred to as an "outrageous marble lie" The Mansion (460).

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