Unnamed Wife of Hub

She stands in the doorway of her small house and watches Hub, Suratt and Young Bayard as they leave to go to town. There is apparently reproach in her look, but in her "flat country voice," she speaks only one word, "Hub" (138).

Unnamed Telegraph Operator

The diffident "young man" (according to Miss Jenny, at least) who does not know what to do after she hands in a telegram for Bayard, without knowing, as he does, that Bayard has died (392).

Mr. Gratton

A short-tempered veteran of World War I, introduced by Eustace Graham as a man who was "up on the British front last spring" (125). The narrator refers to him as "the stranger," meaning that he is not from Yoknapatawpha (125).

Eustace Graham

"A young lawyer" who doesn't realize Young Bayard is drunk (125), he tries to introduce Sartoris to a fellow veteran named Gratton, and then works to smooth Gratton's ruffled feathers after the Bayard ignores him.

Deacon Rogers

Deacon Rogers owns the store and restaurant on the Square. His physical description is striking: "His head was like an inverted egg; his hair curled meticulously away from the part in the center into two careful reddish-brown wings, like a toupee, and his eyes were a melting passionate brown" (120). His demeanor is ingratiating. In the second novel, only his cafe is mentioned, not him.

Houston

The "younger of the two negroes" who work in the restaurant that occupies the back half of Rogers' store. He has a "broad untroubled" and "reliable sort of face" (120). In return for serving setups to Young Bayard and Rafe MacCallum, they share some of Henry MacCallum's moonshine whisky with him.

Unnamed Blind Negro Musician

He is the beggar sitting in front of Rogers' restaurant, "a man of at least forty" who is wearing a motley collection of uniforms and playing a guitar and harmonica (which the narrative calls a "mouthorgan," 118). The narrative describes what he plays as "a plaintive reiteration of rich monotonous chords, rhythymic as a mathematical formula but without music" (118).

Clarence Snopes

The son of I. O. Snopes; his "hulking but catlike presence" (235) makes Bryon Snopes nervous after Bryon moves in with I.O.

I. O. Snopes

"A nimble, wiry little man with a talkative face like a nutcracker," I.O. is the Snopes whom Flem Snopes brings to Jefferson to run the restaurant (235). Byron Snopes moves in with him after leaving the Beard Hotel.

Miss Sophia Wyatt

Sally Wyatt's older sister, who runs the household in which the three elderly Wyatt sisters live "in a capable shrewish fashion" (175).

Pages

Subscribe to The Digital Yoknapatawpha Project RSS