impression that her father had loaned the city money, which in fact was a lie formed by a man of the town to preserve Miss Emily's aristocratic status when her fortune was lost. Shortly afterwards we are backtracked to foreshadowing of the unfolding events by visiting an incident in the past. Emily's neighbors are bothered by an unpleasant smell coming from her house and go to a judge to complain about it. In this part of the story, we see the type of proper southern society Emily is in when the judge says "would you accuse a lady to her face of smelling bad?". We see that the Southern influence greatly affects Emily's personality and decisions. The people around her are constantly upholding her to a certain standard and expect things from her. Emily's status is brought into question when she begins to date Homer Barron, a northern day laborer. Faulkner writes, "then some of the ladies began to say that it was a disgrace to the town and a bad example to the young people". Upset by the courtship, the townsfolk called upon her kin to break up her relationship. We see by this that Emily's decision making process was halted by her outside influences. Emily's bizarre treatment of Homer Barron's body post mortem definitely lies in the relationship she had with her father in regards to men.
It is apparent that Emily's father purposely and promptly put to end any potential courtship that she may have had. This is evident in the passage "We remembered all the young men her father had driven away, and we knew that with nothing left, she would have to cling to that which had robbed her as people will". Emily's father robbed her from many of life's basic things. Her aristocratic society causes her to miss out on being a "woman" and courting men. Her inability to live a normal life greatly affects her happiness which she indirectly blames on her father. Emily becomes so accustomed to her father's presence in her life she uses the rationale that keeping his body will keep him in her life, even if he isn't actively
participating.
This influence is the prime reason as to Emily's first affair with the dead, when she kept her deceased father in her house for three days. The denial of her father's death was an eerie and peculiar display of an unhealthy and strange relationship with her father. " the misters calling on her, and the doctors, trying to persuade her to let them dispose of the body. Just as they were about to resort to law and force, she broke down, and they buried her father quickly." Like keeping her father's body, she keeps Homer Barron's body for so long because she feels as if she finally has a sense of accomplishment in her life. For the first time she is in control of her relationship with a man, and Emily is not ready to give up that feeling. Emily's insanity is truly apparent in the story not when we find that she has been keeping a corpse in a bridal suite, but rather when we realize the twisted nature of the situation. " We noticed that on the second pillow was an indentation of a head. One of us lifted something from it, and leaning forward, that faint and invisible dust, dry and acrid in the nostrils, we saw a long strand of iron-grey hair". This passage implies that though Emily had been sleeping next to the corpse. It is at this point in the story that we understand what has happened and why.
Emily was kept alone and repressed her entire life. The combination of social pressure and over-protective nature of her father forced Emily into developing an "inordinate desire to control". The author's use of timeline also really contribute to the general feeling given by the text. The foreshadowing of the unfolding events is apparent in every moment that Emily is kept from "living life". She held onto the only two men she ever cared for in the only way that suited her. The author's use of setting and atmosphere help illustrate Emily Grierson's condition.