1. What metaphor is used to describe Miss Emily in the first paragraph? In the first paragraph Miss Emily is described as a “fallen monument”, after she died everyone went to her home, not so much to pay respect, but, to see how she lived and see the inside of her house.…
The people of the town noticed the obvious lack of independence in Miss Emily’s life before her father passed. “We remembered all the young men that 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.” After the death of her father, she was faced with the reality of needing to carry responsibility for her own life. Miss Emily, finally free of her tormentous girlhood, suddenly became able to make choices for herself. Even with questionable acts, this character further demonstrated her independence by taking…
10. If you were to write an obituary for Emily Grierson, considering the town's attitudes about her and the ending of the story, what would you include?…
Emily Grierson is an allegory of the old south and its decline against the up and coming new south. According to the town’s people “Alive, Miss Emily had been a tradition, a duty, and a care: a sort of hereditary obligation upon the town…” (404). Emily refused to change keeping with her old southern traditions as the town expanded and evolved around her. This can be physically seen in her house which had once been a favorable place to live, is now dusty and decaying like her traditions. Once she has passed the citizens no longer have her as a hereditary obligation and can being distancing themselves and move farther away from the old…
Emptiness is the feeling you get at 2 A.M when you look at your old Facebook photos, smiling at the old photos of yourself, and realize the people who made you smile, laugh, and giggle are no longer around. You look at these photos as a journey down memory lane but in reality deep down somewhere, you wish you could experience these moments just once more. There’s nothing wrong with having a glance at the past but substituting the past for the present and yearning for it is dangerous. The past has a captivating effect that makes us fall in love it because it helps ignite a sense of happiness and comfortability. You can see the idea of never wanting to let go of the past go in “A Rose for Emily” by William Faulkner. “A Rose…
One could interpret the death scene of Miss Emily as symbolic. “And so she died. Fell ill in the house filled with dust and shadows…” (Kelly, 163). Dust is a pile of dirt that keeps growing, if not taken care of; which is symbolic of the tragic life of Miss Emily. There is such a buildup of sorrow in her life, and she just keeps it hidden away inside her. The effect it had on her became so great that it drove her insane, literally. A shadow is something that lurks behind someone and never leaves them; which is symbolic of the shadow of the wrong Miss Emily committed, in murdering Homer Barron, lurking behind…
The narrator provides that Miss Emily is crazy in an obscure way. First the smell in which we can see in page 284, "will you accuse a lady to her face of smelling bad?" Second, when she wanted arsenic in page 286, "I want arsenic." Thirdly, how she never leaves her house in page 288. Lastly, she is crazy because when the townspeople went inside Miss Emily's house they found Homer lying in a bed decaying and found out that Miss Emily was sleeping next it in page 289, "Then we noticed that in the second pillow… leaning forward, that faint… long strand of iron-gray hair." We can infer that the narrators are just telling the story out of their observation from a first person plural point of view. The narrator is however very…
Her father left her little money but a prestigious name, which meant that people in the town treated Emily differently. They did not make friends with her, not due to the fact that they did not like her, but because she came from a prestigious family. She would not pay for her taxes due to the loophole found by the town mayor. Essentially he had "invented the tale, to the effect that Miss Emily's father had loaned money to the town, which the town preferred this way of repaying" (Faulkner 29). The townspeople did not go reach out to her and support her. As if it was karma due to the fact that she did not treat the townspeople with respect, she even gained and became poor. The townspeople understood "that with nothing left, she would have to cling to that which had robbed her as people will"(Faulkner 31). They did not hold it against her that she had trouble handling this situation. Emily is given the "respectful affection of a fallen monument"(Faulkner 28).…
Her inability to adapt and accept the change society challenged her with, lead to her isolation from society and overall loneliness. This is accentuated through the use of the first person point of view from the narrator that shows her disconnection, and the various instances were she neglects to accept and conform to new change. The narrator representing the majority of Jefferson’s perspective of Miss Emily’s highlights the events that occurred throughout her life giving the impression of the assumptions society made regarding Miss Emily. She was quite disconnected from everyone yet they knew everything about her or they thought they did. At Miss Emily’s funeral, the narrator notes that, “Alive, Miss Emily had been a tradition, a duty, and a care; a sort of hereditary obligation upon the town.” (317). This quote reveals her status within the community as they portray her as an object of sort, degrading her existence as she herself had no real connection with the society of Jefferson. Since they consider as an object it shows how her self-imposed isolation resulted in her status within the society of Jefferson. This is interesting because from the narrator’s tale of Miss Emily’s events the people of Jefferson are portrayed to be obsessed with her. Their obsession with the relationship Miss Emily and Homer Barron is key to this…
Miss Emily Grierson was a woman who was born into what was perceived to be a rich family. She was raised in an upper class home that her prominent family owned. Her father was thought to be financially secure, but when he died, it was proven that the only thing that was left to Miss Emily was the house. She was in fact "left alone, and a pauper" (Faulkner 30). The mayor, at the time of her father's death, was Colonel Sartoris. After her father died Colonel Sartoris had "remitted her taxes" and he had "invented the tale, to the effect that Miss Emily's father had loaned money to the town, which the town preferred this way of repaying" (Faulkner 29). Ten years after the death of Colonel Sartoris the town approached Miss Emily and tried to convince her that she needed to pay her taxes. She defended herself stating, "See Colonel Sartoris, I have no taxes in Jefferson" (Faulkner 30). Miss Emily's refusal to pay the taxes even though Sartoris had been dead for many years showed that she did not have to follow the laws because she believed herself above the law.…
In the short story “A Rose for Emily”, the reader can conclude that Emily appears to have had schizophrenia by way she interacts in the town. Emily’s mental problems start to come to light to the reader when she begins having hallucinations. The reader gains further background and further sees mental instability in Emily right after her father dies. The town people also begin to see that there are mental issues with Emily, yet do not want to make it known to keep the integrity of the town. Emily’s inability to form age appropriate coping skills furthers the point of schizophrenia.…
In a “Rose for Emily” one can feel sympathetic towards the main character, Emily. Her father is a very strict man who did not feel anyone was good enough for his daughter. He did not let her partake in their community or experience love. This left Emily emotionally unbalanced. As a result, Emily is a recluse who cannot deal with the thought of being abandoned.…
Miss Emily was a clear representation of the South. She gives us a personal aspect of the struggles the South encountered and the attempts the South made to be stable. We’re introduced to Miss Emily after her death. People viewed her as a powerless, secluded, lady who never interacted with anyone, and never left her house. She was the depiction of change. Miss Emily was a young beautiful girl with a father that protected her from anything. He controlled her life in any way he could. He was literally “a spraddled silhouette in the foreground” (Faulkner 1070). Furthermore, after her father's death Miss Emily was thirty and alone. She was in denial for three whole days that her father was not dead. This is the literal representation of the South and it’s loss of control and how they denied it to be true…
At the very beginning of the story, when the narrator is describing the house in which Ms Emily lived, we get our first glimpse of symbolism. The way Faulkner describes the house, then and now, actually represents Ms Emily's life. The paint and color of the house represents Ms Emily's conscience. Earlier, the house is clean and white, pure. As time goes on the house becomes decrepit, and sullied, much like Ms Emily's conscience. The "select street" that she lives on in the earlier years, which later becomes infected and surrounded by cotton gins and garages, represents her place in society. While her father was alive, and sometime after he had passed, Ms Emily was considered high class. Suitors were deemed unworthy to claim her. As more and more tragedy strikes her life, people no longer envy, but pity Ms Emily. When Faulkner describes her house as "lifting…
Her appearance, face and her features all suggest a sort of dullness and stillness in her life. "She looked bloated, like a body long submerged in motionless water, and of that pallid hue. Her eyes, lost in the fatty ridges of her face, looked like two small pieces of coal pressed into a lump of dough as they moved from one face to another..." (29). The description of Emily and the features of her face provided by the author demonstrate the dry and deadly character of Emily more clearly. Miss Emily is also a very unsocial and isolated person. The over protecting behavior of her father and too many restrictions put upon her by him, had a great influence and impact in shaping her personality. She lacks the elements of active social life and art of communication in her life. Emily has an extremely proud and self-important disposition because of her family status. "She carried her head high enough- even when we believed that she was fallen" (32). This sentence portrays her aristocratic behavior and high attitude. Her aristocratic behavior isolates her more from the society, leaving her alone with her gradual death, her sole…