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Lonesome Matron In William Faulkner's A Rose For Emily

Decent Essays

In “A Rose for Emily”, William Faulkner share a story of several decades in the life of a lonesome matron, Emily Grierson. With an unidentified narrator, the viewpoint are residents from Emily’s town who watched and studied her since being a young woman residing with her much controlling father. Emily continues to live in her father's house following his death. She is accompanied by a loyal manservant. Years later, a laborer by the name of Homer Barron, from up North, arrives with a project crew. The Homer and Emily are said to be keeping each other company from time to time. Later on Emily travels to the apothecary to purchase arsenic. Homer is never seen again and for thirty years Emily does not leave her home. She grows old and fat with long, iron-gray hair. She stays solitary and eventually dies. Shortly after, the manservant turns the house over to the city and is never seen again. The curious townspeople travel through the vacant house they find a locked room. Breaking down the door they discover a dusty, faded room. In the room is a bed occupied by a skeleton of a man with clothes and toiletries inscribed with Homer’s initials. On the indented pillow next to the …show more content…

The house is large with a square frame and is lavishly decorated. It resembles popular architecture styles back in the 1870’s with cupolas, spires, and scrolled balconies. Garages, cotton gins, and other industrial trappings have replaced the antebellum homes. After Emily’s father passes away, she refuses to change anything. From metallic numbers affixed to the side of the house, to modern mail service, Emily is in a timeless vacuum. The house symbolizes tradition. Like many traditions, they resist change. In the era of this story, proceeding the Civil war, the south is due for change. The locked room upstairs is an idealized realm. Her macabre bridal chamber shows an extreme attempt to cease time and change. A tradition so intense, it costs a human

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