Quentin’s sparse details here suggest that it was Mr. Compson who told him about Sutpen’s illicit business deals—everything that Mr. Compson knows about Sutpen comes from his father, General Compson, who was Sutpen’s friend. Because of this, details about Sutpen that Quentin gleans from his father tend to minimize Sutpen’s bad behavior and portray him in a more sympathetic light. Meanwhile, he extends far less sympathy to people whom Sutpen wronged—like Mr. Coldfield. Here, for instance, he portrays Mr. Coldfield as having a slippery “conscience” and a hatred of the South, taking an almost nihilistic pleasure in the knowledge of the inevitability of the Civil War. This stands in contrast to Sutpen, who has a clear sense of what he wants, knows what moral compromise is involved in getting it, and has formed his entire sense of self around the South.