Not everyone is raised the same, I lived in the middle class and I had friends that their parents were “very well off”. I also had friends who came from the foster program. In the case with Louis Mallard and Emily Grierson you can safely assume that both of them were abused, some time in their lives. Or it could have simply been the era that they both lived in, where men ruled the world. Louis Mallard was somewhat excited that her husband had passed. One can assume her marriage was not a good one. Miss Emily Grierson was abused at a young age by her father Mr. Grierson. Emily grew up under the shadow of her father and it haunted Emily for a long time. Many people grow up differently, and the way they grow up could affect the person they become …show more content…
Mallard, the main character in “A Rose for Emily” wants to badly gain her freedom. Emily has to constantly live with her father’s denial that there is no man fit for his daughter. After her father passed, Emily was all alone. The residents of the town she lived in thought maybe her family would come to her. Instead Emily lived by herself and her black servant Tobin by her side. Mr. Grierson, Emily’s father, prohibited her from socializing with men because, in Mr. Grierson’s eyes, there was no man suitable for Emily. After being tired of being alone for so long, Emily decided to date Homer Barron. Homer Barron was a Northerner and worked as a foreman for a construction company. The older folks of the town were excited for Emily, there was even talk about marriage between the couple. However, the younger crowd did not believe Homer was that of Ms. Griersons high status. Emily was growing old. Her hair was shortening and turning gray. Soon after realizing that “Homer was not the marrying man” and that he would much rather spend his time with young male mates, Emily decided to retaliate. In order to not lose what she thought was the love of her life, Emily went down to the nearest drug store and bought some rat poison and gave it to Homer. Homer died and Emily kept his body in the upstairs room where no one would dare to go. Homer’s body was kept in that upstairs room for over fifty years. After losing her father, Emily did not want to lose the only other male figured she had in her life. Emily thought the only way of keeping him with her for the rest of her life was by death and keeping his
Fick and Gold explained that “The murder takes place because men are expected to behave in other and resisting ways.” (Fick and Gold 101). Emily was a demanding woman, knowing what she wanted. When Homer did not comply with her way, is when she decided to end his life, keeping him hidden away until his remains were discovered.
As a young girl, Emily is cut off socially by her father who drove off all her suitors. When he dies she refuses to accept his death for three days, “She told them that her father was not dead. She did that for three days, with the ministers calling on her, and the doctors, trying to persuade her to let them dispose of the body.” After the three days, the townspeople intervened and buried her father
Meeting Homer Barron was her biggest change from her old self, because her father refused to let her be in any relationships, but she went out in public with Homer “driving in the yellow-wheeled buggy and the matched team of bays from the livery stable” (454). Consequently, this was only because she was living in her own reality and believed that Homer would be the one to marry her. Homer was “not a marrying man” (454) and would not marry Emily, but she refused to accept the denial of marriage from him, so she killed him to keep him with her forever. She stayed within her house to keep herself in the old South. When she told the men to see colonel Sartoris, she was not aware that “Colonel Sartoris had been dead for almost ten years” (452) at that point.
Miss Emily Grierson’s father was an overbearing man, known to have instilled many not-so-pleasing values in Emily; ones that she would always struggle to surpass. Due to his character, the town thought of Emily as “a tradition, a duty and a care; a sort of hereditary obligation upon the town” (Faulkner 75). They believed her to have thought so highly of herself that she would not converse with just anyone, which is a completely false misconception. Her father secluded her to the point where she became totally dependent on him, never really socializing with any member of Jefferson, especially not “all the young men her father had driven away” (77). By isolating her from common folk nearly all her life, Miss Emily Grierson was put in a direct line of failure which snowballed rapidly after her father’s death, leading her to “cling to that which had robbed her, as people will” (77).
When “Emily met them at the door, she was dressed as usual with no trace of grief on her face. She told them that her father was not dead.” After three days of this denial of his death continued, she finally allowed them to take the body and bury it. After several months of depression and loneliness following her father’s death, Emily began riding around town in a buggy with a new friend, a day laborer named Homer Barron. But when Emily found out Homer was not interested in marriage, she lured him to her house, kidnapped and poisoned him. This time, however, she would not allow the townspeople to take the body of her loved one from the house again.
The narrator in the story tells us that even when Emily’s dad died she still remained the same person. Homer Barron a contractor paving streets from her hometown arrived and she really started to love him, for who he was. However, events that happened in her life made her relationship harder with him. When Emily came back from visiting her two distant cousins, Homer returned but that was the last time the town saw him. Emily
Then it goes back in time to tell about Emily’s childhood. When Emily’s father dies, she refuses to believe it for three days. After her father is buried, Emily is isolated from the outside world. Later on Emily is seen with a man named Homer Barron. They are seen riding around together.
In the story, A Rose for Emily by William Faulkner, main character Miss Emily lives in just a typical life, but usually gets eyed out from the townspeople. She is the only child whose father is a selfish man keeping Miss Emily from getting out of the house. Not only is she being kept from leaving the house but her father is holding back her love life with his strict rules. Her father would keep a gigantic horsewhip around him every time Miss Emily ever disobeys him or even when she brings home someone to the house. Because of her father’s strict ways, this routine had been going on for years up until her father’s death and right when she was in her thirties.
She bought all of those items because she wanted HOmer to be with her forever, no matter what. Emily wanted a companion so desperately that she murdered Homer so that he would stay with her. Emily is like this because her only male figure, her father, had recently passed away. She needs a male companion to fill in that
There are terrible secrets everywhere, like Homer Barron’s corpse. Barron’s corpse shows how detached and unresolved Emily was. She was afraid of letting go of the things she loved. She never accept her Mr. Grierson’s death. So, she decided to do some necrophilia in order to preserve Homer.
A Rose for Emily has two types of conflict. Person Vs. Self, Emily tends deal with a lot of problems by herself. Her father never let her date or marry anyone because he thought they weren’t good enough for her. After her father died she tried to keep the body, she didn’t really have anyone in her life except her father.
In “A Rose for Emily,” William Faulkner depicts the series of events and circumstances surrounding a reclusive woman in a small Mississippi town. The woman, Emily Grierson, is portrayed as eccentric by everyone in the town for her strange behavior. Faulkner uses a distinct narrative style throughout his story, using structure and narration to inform the reader’s understanding of the main character, Emily. Faulkner presents the narrative through a unique structure, with the narrator utilizing a series of flashbacks to depict the events of the story. These flashbacks are all chronological except for the first one, the one in which Emily dies.
In his short story, “A Rose for Emily,” William Faulkner describes how Emily Grierson became an enigmatic mystery in Jefferson, a small Southern town in the United States of America. Although he suggests people in Jefferson have their own idea of who Emily was and why she behaved so strangely, her entire existence was a puzzle for the townspeople to piece together. This story is divided into five parts. In part one, the author opens at the time of protagonist Emily Grierson 's death, and he reveals part of the reason she died alone: Emily 's father had turned down most of Emily 's suitors. In part two, Faulkner further elaborates upon the collective pity the town felt for Emily once her father died.
Faulkner makes Emily’s flaws abundantly clear from the start of the story. The first sentence, “the women mostly out of curiosity to see the inside of the house, which no one save an old manservant-a combined gardener and cook--had seen in the last ten years” (Faulkner 517) serves to describe Emily as an outsider and sort of outcast before the story really even starts. Faulkner uses Emily to capture an extreme version of what he saw a little of in all women. One example of Emily’s differentness is her dating of Homer. Faulkner describes Homer as an outsider the first time we meet him, “Homer Barron-a big, dark, ready man” (Faulkner 520).
After mourning for her dead father she meets a boy named Homer Barron, and Emily begins to like him. Everyone was worried about what she was doing. Emily buys arsenic and the town rumors have it that she is going to kill herself. To change the scene and make it look like a wedding, Emily buys a couple of things like man's toilet set and clothing and people think she is getting married. When Homer entered the house, he never came out.