Cambridge Inset: Town Center in The Sound and the Fury (Location)

To get to the bridge where he will commit suicide later, Quentin takes an "interurban" train (105). This distinction from the trolleys he takes in Cambridge and Boston suggests he travels outside those places. The train follows a route parallel to the Charles River, but the text does not say in which direction, east or west. Because the landscape he finds when he decides to get off the train is more rural - "the road went into the trees," for example (112) - it seems most likely that imaginatively, Faulkner located this second town to the west of Harvard.

Cambridge Inset: River and Drawbridge in The Sound and the Fury (Location)

Eighty miles long, the Charles River flows between Boston and Cambridge before emptying into Boston Harbor. Most of Quentin's wanderings during the day stay close to it. It is still, as in the novel, where the Harvard crew teams row. However, like most of the Massachusetts settings in Quentin's section, the drawbridge where Quentin gets off the trolley, looks at the Charles River "healing out to the sea" (90), and then watches Gerald Bland take a shell from a boathouse and start rowing is apparently Faulkner's invention.

Dalton Ames

A new arrival in Jefferson in the summer of 1909, Dalton Ames is the first man Caddy Compson has sex with, and may be the father of Caddy's daughter. Caddy tells Quentin that Ames has "been in the army had killed men" (148) and "crossed all the oceans all around the world" (150). Quentin discovers for himself how good Ames is with a pistol when he tries ordering him to leave town. For more than one reason Quentin feels that Ames is not a proper suitor for Caddy, including the issue of class; his name, Quentin thinks, "just missed gentility" (92).

Mrs. Bland

Mrs. Bland is the mother of Quentin's Harvard classmate Gerald; she has moved from Kentucky to Cambridge to be close to her son. She lays claim to an aristocratic heritage, and in person is both formal and insistent. Shreve calls her "fate in eight yards of apricot silk" (106).

Patterson Boy

The Pattersons' house is adjacent to the Compsons'. Quentin remembers that when Jason was younger, he and "the Patterson boy . . . made kites on the back porch and sold them for a nickel a piece" (94). Jason parted ways with him, apparently when the boy complained about not getting his share of the profits.

Unnamed Men at Boathouse

These two men carry the rowing "shell" that Gerald Bland uses from the boat house to the water (90).

Colonel Sartoris

Colonel Sartoris looms large over Faulkner's first Yoknapatawpha fiction, Flags in the Dust - originally published in 1929 as Sartoris. In that novel he was killed fifteen or more years before the Compson children were born.

Grandfather Compson

His first name is not given in this novel, but he appears in a dozen more Yoknapatawpha fictions (more than any other Compson), and several of them, including the "Appendix" to The Sound and the Fury that Faulkner published in 1946, identify the full name of the paternal grandfather of the Compson children as "Jason Lycurgus Compson." He is the second Compson with that name; there are two more who appear in the novel: his son Mr. Compson, and Mr. and Mrs. Compson's third child, who is Jason IV.

Unnamed Boy(1)

After the Patterson boy stops selling kites with him, Jason finds a new partner, presumably another child about his own age (and presumably more lackadaisical than the Patterson boy about who ends up with the money they make).

Cambridge Inset: Swimming Hole in The Sound and the Fury (Location)

The three boys whom Quentin talks with at the bridge argue about whether to go to "the Eddy" and fish, or to "the mill" and swim (121). When he next sees them, they are swimming (136). They call the mill "Bigelow's"; if it is like the other mills built along the river to take advantage of water power, there is a dam across the river behind which the water would likely be quiet and deep.

Pages

Subscribe to The Digital Yoknapatawpha Project RSS