“And the Quentin Compson who was still too young to deserve yet to be a ghost but nevertheless having to be one for all that, since he was born and bred in the deep South the same as she was” (AA 4).
“Born and bred” in the deep South, Quentin inherits the collective conscious of a post-civil war culture and is therefore a “ghost” of this past as the attitudes and norms that were birthed out of it govern the environment that shapes his personality. But as we read the first four chapters of Absalom, Absalom! and learn about Rosa Coldfield’s family, we realize that, in a way, Quentin’s character is also a more specific “ghost” of the past that embodies the spirit of Rosa’s family. Quentin shares some neurotic qualities with various members of the family that motivate his most extreme behaviors including his suicide, and his most striking similarities are with Rosa’s nephew, Henry Sutpen.
Quentin’s relationship with Caddy mirrors that of Henry and Judith, who are said to have “closer than the traditional loyalty of brother and sister even; a curious relationship” (AA 62). While Quentin and Caddy are not actually incestuous as he claims, they too have a closer relationship than most siblings, as suggested by Quentin who drives himself crazy at Harvard constantly thinking of Caddy’s loss of virginity and rebellious sexuality. Caddy is represented as more masculine than Quentin as she loses her virginity before her brother and her sexual appetite becomes one of the family’s greatest problems. Quentin muses on the importance of virginity among women and notes that “in the south [boys and men] are ashamed of being a virgin” (TSAF); therefore, the fact that Caddy is “unvirgin” before him is emasculating and troubling for her reputation. Henry is in a similar sibling dyad. Judith is suggested to be superiorly masculine to Henry: “this the hoyden who could – and did – outrun and outclimb, and ride and fight both with and beside her brother” (AA 52). This same gender role reversal is also seen in Mr. Coldfield and his sister (Rosa’s aunt), who Rosa claims to have been “twice the man that Mr Coldfield was and who in very truth was not only Miss Rosa’s mother but her father too” (AA 49). This unconventional dynamic is something that Quentin, Henry, and Mr. Coldfield all struggle with, and notably none of them succeed in the south (Quentin kills himself, Henry disappears, and Mr. Coldfield incarcerates himself in his attic and eventually starves himself). While their unfortunate ends were not necessarily the result of their emasculation, that is a common link among all of these misfits.
Quentin’s emasculation extends beyond his relationship with Caddy to college, where it is suggested that he may have a homosexual relationship with his roommate Shreve. Henry also shares a close relationship with his college roommate, Charles Bon, and while we do not know much about their specific interactions, the two are close enough to spend holidays together and enlist in the same army unit. Like Quentin in college, there is no mention of any women that Henry interacts with in the first four chapters of Absalom, Absalom! aside from Judith.
Quentin and Henry seem to share a similar disdain for the men with whom their sisters relate. After Charles and Judith are engaged, Henry allegedly kills his previously closest friend for reasons unspecified before chapter 4. Quentin tries to attack (with a mind to kill) both Dalton Ames and Herbert Head, but his own impotence prevents him from taking effective action like Charles.
Quentin and Henry have many common problems, but for better or for worse, Quentin is not as effective as Henry when he tries to confront his problems. Henry kills Charles, whereas Quentin cannot so much as throw a punch at Dalton Ames. Henry disappears (escaping his dysfunctional home), whereas Quentin actually kills himself. As we read on, attending to Quentin’s reception of the Sutpen story and Henry’s actions throughout, these parallel characters may provide insight as to how Quentin comes to take his own life, and how Henry comes to disappear from the Sutpen family.

