A Rose For Emily 1. Why was it difficult‚ if not impossible‚ for Emily to meet possible husbands in her youth? So the reason she couldn’t meet possible husbands in her youth was because of her father and if her father had been a little better with the different men that wanted her than that would have the life of his daughter in the future. But he left her at a tough position by thinking that no man is good enough for his daughter. An evident for this would be‚ “… [No] young… [Man was]… good
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My reaction of Happy Endings and A Rose for Emily. Happy Endings is a quite interesting short story. Margaret Atwood is such a great author of her peers. She has put a different twist in literature. I was quite impressed with this‚ since I have not read anything quite so unique. The short stories that I have read have always been the same type of reading. They all have a straightforward beginning‚ middle‚ and end. With Happy Endings‚ it has many different scenarios that can possibly happen before
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critically. Try to answer your own questions if possible. If you answer your own questions as you progress in your reading‚ make note of your new understandings. Why did the colonel do that for Emily’s father? Did he do something prior for him and his family or something? Is the smell from a dead body? The drug is labeled “for rats”‚ did Homer do something to Emily like cheating on her? No‚ she kills him so she won’t have to lose him.What’s the deal with the yellow? If she was laying on the bed with
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Grierson was the reason Emily was not married and he was also the reason Emily experienced attachment and control disorders later in her life. The narrator tells the readers that the Grierson’s had held themselves a little too high for what they were and that none of the young men were good enough for Miss Emily. The town’s people thought of the Grierson’s as a tableau‚ with Miss Emily in the background dressed in white and her father in the front with his back towards Miss Emily clutching on to a horsewhip
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The character Emily Rose in "A Rose for Emily" is considered a static character because; her traits throughout the story do not change. In the story she is deemed as quiet‚ inhuman and‚ even mad. However‚ through further inspection; there are characteristics displayed throughout the story that can possibly prove that Emily was a dynamic character. Throughout the piece Emily changes both mentally‚ socially and physically. Miss Emily‚ the main character of this story‚ lives for many years as a recluse;
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Faulkner’s “A Rose for Emily” characterizes each generation and its struggles. Every generation thinks they can improve on the ideas and accomplishments of the past. The next generation fails to realize they are really relying on the past. Faulkner uses the townspeople to represent‚ in effect‚ the changing of the guard. In the story there are three distinct types of townspeople. The first type is the gentlemen‚ or in other words southern aristocrats. The second type is the younger generation making
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Debra Arnold January 14‚ 2011 Emily Grierson “A Rose for Emily” is a horror story by Faulkner. Emily Grierson‚ whose life story is told by an anonymous narrator‚ who represents the attitudes and ideas of the community. When suppressed by her father until his death‚ she takes up with a Northern laborer‚ Homer Barron. When she is faced with desertion from Homer‚ she turns to murdering him by arsenic. It was later discovered after Emily’s death that Homer’s rotting corpse was in the upstairs
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In A Rose for Emily‚ William Faulkner uses an observers narration to convey a decaying conservative culture. At the beginning of the story‚ Emily is youthful and skinny‚ but as the story progresses she is portrayed as fat‚ lonely‚ and someone who lives in solitude -- but when the town attends her funeral‚ they find that she had been keeping a corpse. Throughout the story‚ Faulkner mainly focuses on the values that the townspeople of Jefferson reflect towards Emily Grierson‚ a woman who exemplifies
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Age-related Psychosocial Traits and Skills Two year Old Likes to see and touch Very attached to parent Plays alone- does not share Limited vocabulary Interested in self help skills Social-emotional development of the 2 year old Self-centered Clings to the familiar Routine dependent Contacts by pushing and shoving Easily distracted and frustrated Complete dependence on adults Mental Development of the 2 year old One thing at a time One or two-word sentences Time
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In “A Rose For Emily” by William Faulkner‚ although the order of the plot is not chronological‚ it serves several purposes in making the story more interest and impactful. The chronology of events that go back and forth allows readers to make assumptions and delivers a shocking twist of Emily’s life at the end. The story focuses mainly on the old traditional way of life‚ social statuses‚ and background of characters. In the first section‚ Miss Emily’s funeral symbolizes the passing of “Old South”
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