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The Lamp At Noon Short Story

Decent Essays

Stories often reflect a society's fears as it does in “A Rose for Emily” by William Faulkner, “The Lamp at Noon” by Sinclair Ross and “The Yellow Wallpaper” by Charlotte Perkins Stetson. “A Rose for Emily” depicts an American fear of a problem becoming worse through isolation. Emily’s broken relationship with her father leads her to necrophilia and her disassociation with her community allows for it to get to that extreme. Another American short story reflecting this fear is that of the “Yellow Wallpaper” in which the narrator, suffering from depression, is pushed into isolation by her husband and brother. This isolation takes her from depressed to insane up until she believes that not only is there a woman trapped in the wallpaper but that the woman is herself. Her fate also could have been prevented if her husband had not left her so long that he was not able to notice her impending madness; this can also be said about her sister-in-law. “The Lamp at Noon” conveys the Canadian fear of the direct effects of isolation. As the dust storm isolates Ellen from not just humans but from nature itself, it puts her into a mentally unstable state of mind which causes her to take her baby and leave the house which ultimately leads to her baby’s death. As these stories mirror the fears of North Americans, they also convey how we have the power to protect one another from these fears. Emily’s father was so controlling of over her life to the point where the community “remembered all

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