| William Faulkner's Yoknapatawpha County, with Jefferson as its county seat, is
 both a mythical and actual place.  Yoknapatawpha  county is 2400 square miles in
 area and has a population of 15,611 persons.  Jefferson has an actual jail, town
 square, old houses, and Old Frenchman's Place, even a railroad.  Faulkner's
 "Yoknapatawpha County" is in reality Lafayette County, and "Jefferson"  is
 actually Oxford.  The  Faulkner family lived there since before the Civil War.
 This is where most of his stories take place.  He pondered the family history
 and his own personal history; and he used both in writing his stories.
 (American Writers; 54)
 Faulkner born in New Albany, Mississippi in 1897.  In 1902 they ...
 
 
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 figure in Northern Mississippi.  Many details of his lifehave shown up in Faulkner's writings.  He was twice acquitted of murder charges.
 He was a believer in severe discipline and was a colonel of a group of raiders
 of the Civil War.  He began as a poor youngster trying to take care of his
 widowed mother, but ending his career as the owner of a railroad and a member of
 the state legislature.  He was killed by his former railroad partner shortly
 after he had defeated the other for a seat in the legislature.  There is a
 statue of William C. Falkner facing his railroad today. (American Writers; 55b)
 J. W. T. Faulkner was a lawyer, a banker, and assistant United States
 attorney.  He was an active member of "rise of the "rednecks"", the political
 movement that gave greater suffrage to tenant farmers.  The people of Oxford say
 he had and explosive temper. (American Writers; 55c)
 The  characters Colonel Sartoris and Bayard Sartoris portray Faulkner's
 great-grandfather and ...
 
 
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 |   he studied English, Spanish, and French, but he was only in residence forone full academic year.  He took a job in a bookstore in New York City, but he
 soon returned to Oxford.  He did odd jobs such as a carpenter of house painter
 for two years, then became postmaster at the university.  He soon resigned,
 saying in his letter of resignation, " I will be damned if I propose to be at
 the beck and call of every itinerant scoundrel who has two cents to invest in a
 postage stamp."  This same year, 1924, The Marble Faun was publicized, a book of
 poems.  Stone had subsidized its publication. (American Writers; 55g)
 Faulkner decided to go to Europe by means of New Orleans.  Once he ...
 
 
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