In "A Rose for Emily," the townspeople view Miss Emily as an epitome of southern values, yet they are unknowingly accomplices in her murder. In other words, Miss Emily possesses hidden personalities which the townspeople were unaware of, thus leading to the ultimate doom of Homer Barron. Throughout the duration of the story, the narrator plays an important role in developing main ideas. He holds an extensive knowledge of the events that play out and despite the limits of said knowledge, it becomes apparent that the narrator holds an important relation between Miss Emily and himself. With further gain in knowledge, it also becomes apparent that this relation is one of a symbiotic dramatic foil; one ceases to exist in the absence of the other. …show more content…
As stated before, the narrator, along with the many other townspeople is an accomplice in Homer Barron's murder. He chooses to conceal his true knowledge of the crime in hopes of forcing both the other townspeople and the reader to make assumptions of the crime. Thus, the conflict between knowledge and assumption arrises. In addition, the situational irony dealing with necrophilia, bewilders the readers; it is a form of distraction to divert the readers' attention from the truth of the relation between the narrator and Miss …show more content…
Although the townspeople seem to show no reaction to her new way of living, they suspect that something has happened. As stated before, they are unable to speak their beliefs though out of respect for her wealthy familial background and southern values. She relied on them and they relied on her to keep her sanity, which she ironically no longer possessed. Her guilty conscious finally takes over at the time of her death; it consumes her to the point where she can no longer live. When the townspeople discover the horrendous decaying corpse in Miss Emily's house, her conscious can finally free itself of
Littered throughout the story is evidence that the murder took place. When Emily takes up with Homer Barron, a man whom the narrator makes clear was not the marrying kind; rumors start to fly about the two at a time when it was not considered proper for a man and woman to live together. The town, her relatives, and the Baptist minister disapproved of the relationship, and Emily was in danger of loosing Homer. A year after the relationship begins, and the pressures to either marry
The summer after her father died, the town hired contractors to pave the sidewalks. The foreman, Homer Barron, and Miss. Emily became quite fond of one another. On Sunday afternoons they could bee seen driving in his buggy together. Soon the people began to whisper about Emily and Homer. Emily held her head high; she would not be seen as anything other than respectful. The town's people believed that Miss. Emily should have kinfolk come to stay with her for a while.
In addition to the impact of her family on her mental state, it is also through the relationship Miss Emily has with her community, that helps to foreshadow the fateful ending. It is through the words and actions of the community that this relationship is shown, such as how they even distance themselves from her. In the beginning of the story in Act I, Faulkner describes Miss Emily’s position in the town as “a sort of hereditary obligation”. Since the death of her father, the town is aware of the struggle she is having while being alone, so that is why they see her
Emily comes from a family with high expectations of her a sort of “hereditary obligation” (30). Emily has been mentally manipulated by her as so indicated in the line of the story “we did not say she was crazy then we believed she had to do that we remember all the young men her father had driven away” (32). There is already proof of mental illness in the family “remembering how old lady Wyatt, her great aunt, had gone completely crazy last” (32).
In "A Rose for Emily," William Faulkner's use of setting and characterization foreshadows and builds up to the climax of the story. His use of metaphors prepares the reader for the bittersweet ending. A theme of respectability and the loss of, is threaded throughout the story. Appropriately, the story begins with death, flashes back to the past and hints towards the demise of a woman and the traditions of the past she personifies. Faulkner has carefully crafted a multi-layered masterpiece, and he uses setting, characterization, and theme to move it along.
This story about a woman, who is called Emily. she came from a rich family .She’s elegant woman ,but she is strange woman in the world . so anyone or people in her village could not understand about her. She doesn’t have mother but she only had a father. They lived in big house in a little village. Her father didn’t married again so he needed and love Emily very much. And didn’t want anyone take away her from him. But she wanted to have boy friends, because she always feel lonely,but every man who wanted to date with her,her father always rejected all of them,because he was afraid to be left alone.Because of this he forbade Emily to see men and this was not good for Emily ,shevalso got afraid to be
William Faulkner is a well-known author, whose writing belongs in the Realism era in the American Literary Canon. His writing was influence by his Southern upbringing, often setting his stories in the fictional Southern town, Yoknapatawpha County. “A Rose for Emily” was one of Faulkner’s first published pieces and displays many of the now signature characteristics of Faulkner’s writing. The short story provides commentary through the use of many symbols. In William Faulkner’s short story, “A Rose for Emily”, the author uses the townspeople as a representation of societal expectations and judgments, Emily and her house as symbols for the past, and Homer’s corpse as a physical representation of the fear of loneliness.
In “A Rose for Emily,” Emily Grierson, referred to as Miss Emily throughout the story, is the main character of 'A Rose for Emily'. Emily used to live with her father and servants, in a big decorated house. Emily was not able to develop any real relationship with anyone else, but it was like her world revolved around her father. When her father passed away, it was a devastating loss for Miss Emily. Instead of going on with her life, her life halted after death of her father. Miss Emily found love in a guy named Homer Barron, who came as a contractor for paving the sidewalks in town. The passed passage of time creates a tension in her life. At first she cannot accept the death of her father. After that she creates tension in the community by refusing to pay the taxes. When Emily proposed Homer Barron
She has a fear of being abandoned or alone. She lied about her father’s death for 3 days so they wouldn’t be able to take the body. In the story it says, “The day after his death all the ladies prepared to call at the house and offer condolence and aid, as is our custom. Miss Emily met them at the door, dressed as usual and with no trace of grief on her face. She told them her father was not dead.
The main symbolism running throughout A Rose for Emily by William Faulkner, is the theme of how important it is to let go of the past. Miss Emily clings to the past and does not want to be independent. The Old South is becoming the new South and she cannot move forward. The residents of the South did not all give in to change just because they lost the Civil War. In A Rose for Emily time marches on leaving Miss Emily behind as she stubbornly refuses to progress into a new era. In the story, symbolism is used to give more details than the author actually gives to the reader. Symbolism helps to indicate how Emily was once innocent but later changes, how her hair, house, and lifestyle, helped to show her resistance to change. The story is not
Like always, the town makes excuses for Miss Emily despite this mysterious development, saying that they “knew that this was to be expected too; as if that quality of her father which had thwarted her woman’s life so many times had been too virulent and too furious to die”(Faulkner 458). The town was fully aware of Emily’s suspicious behavior, and decided to look the other way. They decided that her father’s actions, who “thwarted her woman’s life so many times”, was enough reason to blatantly ignore Homer’s disappearance. The narrator is careful to leave Emily’s biggest secret for last, which further gives evidence
The townspeople felt bad for Emily and thought the reason for her craziness was because her family had a history of it. Emily also waits three days before revealing the death of her father. Emily allows the dead body of her father to lie in her home rotting away. Another crazy action that Emily does is when she goes to the pharmacy to purchase “rat poison”. When Emily goes to buy the arsenic she doesn’t tell the druggist what exactly she is going to use it for, but stares him down making him feel uncomfortable. “Miss Emily just stared at him, her head tilted back in order to look him eye for eye, until he looked away and went and got the arsenic and wrapped it up” (213). One of the most extreme actions Emily performs is being responsible for Homer Barron’s death. But, after fully reading the story the reader understands that Emily not only kills Homer but sleeps with his corpse. “What was left of him, rotted beneath what was left of the nightshirt, had become inextricable from the bed in which he lay… Then we noticed that in the second pillow was the indentation of a head. One of us lifted something from it, and leaning forward, that faint and invisible dust dry and acrid in the nostrils, we saw a long strand of iron-gray hair” (215) There the reader’s thought of Emily sleeping with the dead body and her psychotic tendencies is confirmed.
In “A Rose For Emily” by William Faulkner, the rose symbolizes the town’s respect for Emily, and discloses the irony of Emily never receiving a rose from Homer. At the beginning of the story Faulkner talks about the death of Emily. “When Miss Emily Grierson died, our whole town went to her funeral”(). “...respectful affection for a fallen monument”(). Emily has, metaphorically, always been in the town and symbolizes the past for her town.
In William Faulkner's short story "A Rose for Emily," Miss Emily Grierson is a lonely old woman, living a life negated of all love and affection; Emily lives with an aggressively protective father who turns away all the suitors that come seeking for her love, thinking that none of them are good enough for her. After her father dies, Emily finds a suitor of her own, though their story does not have a happy ending. The events of the story are hidden in mysterious ways, and symbolism is used to enhance the plot and create meaning. The story never reveals an actual rose for Emily.
The story “A Rose for Emily” by William Faulkner would be drastically different if it was written from the point of view of Miss Emily. Her intentions and thoughts would be more pronounced, and because of this, the ending of the story may not come as such a shock. In addition, Miss Emily would be less distanced from the audience, and they would be able to understand her character in a way that the townspeople could not. Miss Emily being the narrator would immensely change the reader’s perception of the story’s ending and her character.