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A Rose For Emily Symbolism

Decent Essays

William Faulkner’s classic short story “A Rose for Emily” is the somewhat disturbing tale of Emily Grierson and her strange life. Split into five parts, the story flashes back and forth between Emily’s funeral and memories of Emily from the viewpoint of the unknown narrator. The narrator remembers times when Emily refused to pay taxes, and another time when men went and put lime on Emily’s yard because her house smelled so awful. When Emily’s father died, it took three days for her to stop denying his death and let him be buried. The summer after her father’s death, A Yankee named Homer Barron started seeing Emily, which was a big deal because her father had never let her date. One day, Emily went to a druggist and bought arsenic with no explanation, and the town thought she was going to kill herself. However, she did not, and the townspeople even assumed she and Homer got married, but they never saw him again. It was not until Emily died, and they felt enough time had passed, that the people broke down one of her doors that had been unopened for forty years. They found the decaying body of Homer Barron laying in the bed, along with a strand of Emily’s gray hair on the pillow beside him. Although the story may just sound like a gruesome tale of a woman with necrophilia, there can be other meanings found through symbolism. A symbol creates a direct, meaningful connection between a specific object, scene, character, or action. In “A Rose for Emily,” Emily can be seen as a

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