In this way, we, perhaps for the first time, get the feeling that someone actually cares about Addie, that her life is consequential. Throughout the novel, Jewel continues to prove his love for his mother, first in the river and second in the barn, both times by saving the coffin. Remember Addie predicting that Jewel was her salvation, that he would save her from water and fire? Jewel is repeatedly characterized by his affinity for these creatures.
The emotion is an incommunicable one and ill-understood by those around him. This is yet another case of perspective. Peabody feels as though Jewel treats his mother as nothing but a pack-horse — the irony, of course, is that Jewel intensely loves both beings. Sounds like a horse, right? He refuses ever to complain about his broken, festering leg, allowing the injury to degenerate to the point that he may never walk again. The only Bundren daughter. Dewey Dell is seventeen, and a recent sexual experience has left her pregnant.
Increasingly desperate, she finds her mind occupied exclusively with her pregnancy, and views all men with varying degrees of suspicion. The youngest of the Bundren children. Although his ramblings at the beginning of the novel border on the maniacal, Vardaman proves to be a thoughtful and innocent child. Tull is both a critic of and an unappreciated help to the Bundrens.
He hires Darl, Jewel, and Cash for odd jobs, and helps the family cross the river in spite of its overt hostility toward him. In a supreme effort to disassociate himself from her problems, Lafe gives Dewey Dell ten dollars with which to pay for an abortion. The local minister. Held up by Cora Tull as the pinnacle of piety, Whitfield is in fact a hypocrite.
The severely overweight rural doctor who attends to Addie and later to Cash. Peabody is extremely critical of the way Anse treats his children. The local farmer who puts up the Bundrens on the first evening of their disastrous funeral journey. A local farmer who puts up the Bundrens on the second evening of their funeral journey.
A rather despicable young employee at a Jefferson drugstore. Jewel was conceived at a time when Addie was searching for some violent act that would give to her a sense of awareness. Her relations with the preacher Whitfield were to her symbolically more violent because his garments were sanctified. Jewel has only one section to narrate. And in this section we see Jewel expressing his love in the most terrible images and thoughts.
We see his deep-rooted, violent, but inexpressible love for Addie. Because Jewel is unable to express his love for his mother, he substitutes all of his love for the horse.
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