Analysis Of Miss Emily Grierson In William Faulkner's A Rose For Emily

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In “A Rose for Emily” (1931), William Faulkner presents a jaw dropping story contrasting an aristocratic woman and her unspeakable secrets. The narrator takes the readers through the secretive life of a “fallen monument,” as the community calls her, named Miss Emily Grierson. In contrast to the community’s view, readers quickly realize that Grierson is a disturbed woman as she poisons her lover, Homer Barron, and keeps his rotting corpse and sleeps next to him until she dies. Starting with the funeral of Grierson, the story jumps from two years after her father’s death, to the beginning and end of her love story, and circles back to the after her funeral. Grierson ultimately tries to make a world of her own, and is seemingly out of touch with