Town’s People point of view in “A Rose for Emily” William Faulkner chooses a unique way to tell the story; instead of using singular pronoun, he prefers to use the first plural pronoun. In concrete terms, he refers to the town’s people point of view. The town’s people either pity Emily or judge her actions. Sometimes it is hard to distinguish either they are admiring Emily for her aristocratic attitude or they are antipathy her for the smell of the house. The narrator shows a lot of characteristics of the Southern Old culture by going through the three stages of the story: Emily’s father’s death, which continues with her isolation and ends with Homer’s arrival in the town. The way how William writes the story is by using the unchronological …show more content…
A romance between him and Emily begins to grow. Faulkner decides that the climax will be the moment when she goes to buy the arsenic with all her aristocratic attitude; which the narrations really admire it. “Miss Emily just stared at him, her head tilted back in order to look him eye for eye,” she uses all her convincing attitude to get what she wanted to take and doing everything to avoid the consequences from the law. With murdering her love, Faulkner refers to the fact how hard is for a person to let his or her love to go away forever. Regarding the love and the caution of Emily toward Homer, narrators use terms such as “man's toilet set in silver”, “H. B. on each piece”, and “outfit of men's clothing” to describe it (p.520). Town’s people seem to be happy about their marriage “We were really glad. We were glad because the two female cousins were even more Grierson than Miss Emily had ever been”. Faulkner decides to conclude the story by finishing what he started on the introduction; the death of Emily. Everyone was surprised by what they found on her bed. “Then we noticed that in the second pillow was the indentation of a head.” Faulkner also does not close it completely by telling everything exactly what happened in order to let the reader find it out by him or herself. Using “we” person Faulkner makes the reader “see” the whole situation and in this way, he makes it easy for the reader to understand what was the town’s people