Saturday, April 18, 2020
Rose For Emily Essays (1412 words) - A Rose For Emily, Emily
  Rose For Emily    "A Rose for Emily" By William Faulkner Reading this atypical piece of work  entitled "A Rose for Emily", written by William Faulkner encourages a sense  of thrill and stimulation within. Since Mr. Faulkner resided in Mississippi most  of his writings reflect his home state, as does "A Rose for Emily". The  first person minor point of view is being told by the townspeople. The main  character, Miss Emily, in this short gothic story that took place during the  early 1900 hundreds demonstrated a conflict she was having with herself. I think  that it is well known that our parents are the backbone to each person's  existence. Knowing this, William Faulkner managed to include through the events  in the plot an underlining message mixed with a little flowered mockery.    Although, Ms. Emily committed murder, she was a victim of her learned  environment because of her father and the citizens of Jefferson. This story  revolved around one town and one main character. The beginning of this woman's  well to do life in a poor southern state consisted only of herself and her  domineering father living in the same house until the calling of God summoned  her elsewhere. Miss Emily managed to make it to age thirty still being single  with only the help of her father and "she would... continue to cling to that  which had robbed her"(472). The town's people assumed that "none of the  young men were quite good enough for Ms. Emily and such"(471). When the only  person in Emily's life passed on, she stood in denial and refused condolences  an aid to bury her father from the town ladies. The damage that her father had  bestowed upon her by sheltering her from the rest of the world was starting to  emerge at the time of his death. By over-protecting Emily and "clutching a  horsewhip"(471) to control her life, caused her to become hermit-like in the  town she grew up in and knew very well. This creator of Emily must have lead her  life for her in every way, fore when he exited the earth, he managed to take a  big part of her with him. I believe this caused a confused state in which Emily  really didn't know herself, causing her to be so afraid of being alone that  townspeople were "trying to persuade her to let them dispose of the body...  for three days"(471). Emily came upon and involved herself with a second male  figure that turned out to be her lover. In the end Emily poisons her lover to  keep him from leaving her. The fulfilling plot is retold by the townspeople as  if they were all reflecting upon her life and the things they remembered. By the  author reflecting back, using the whole town, it gave the story a sense of  upcoming purpose. The climax continued to climb starting "when the smell  developed"(470) to Emily purchasing the arsenic and finally the very end when  the realization was put forth by "a long strand of iron-gray hair"(475)  implying that she really killed Homer. The author's tone carried sympathy for    Emily as stated by the townspeople, when they said "poor Emily"(472) several  times. The characterization of Emily was also provided by the description of her  house that had once been white, decorated with a nice roof, steeple, and"scrolled balconies in the heavily lightsome style of the seventies"(469),  compared to the current portrait given of "an eye sore among eyesores"(469).    The townspeople who "had begun to feel really sorry for her"(471), along  with her father, all provided an external unhealthy motivation that is  responsible for her unthinkable actions of murdering Homer. A mixture of simple  to read sentences along with minor dialog made the story easy to understand. I  felt the style of writing provided a spirited suspense by not letting on that    Homer was dead until the closing paragraphs. For me, stories like that keep me  reading until the very end. A story like this, that took place in the south  during the early 1900 hundreds basically got away with murder. If the setting  for this story would have been present day 2000, it would have upset and  infuriated some readers for the fact that a crime was committed and no one were  prosecuted. The town officials would have carried more of the blame for not  finding out the real cause of that smell. The black servant would have also been  charged for not reporting the murder. Basically, any other time and place would  have caused the story to lose its    
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