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Home In William Faulkner's A Rose For Emily

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In William Faulkner's, A Rose for Emily, story was intense. The story was considered to be southern gothic, not only because Emily is a troubled woman but because there is definitely something dark and mysterious about her that nobody can quite understand. Emily was Mr. Grierson’s daughter, they were well known privileged people who were held on a pedestal. Mr. Grierson had done something for his community therefor they felt that they owed him something. Her father was over protective of his daughter, not sure if that is even the appropriate word to describe his actions, or why he would deliberately sabotage his daughters relationships. He had full control over his daughters life. When he passed away inside their home, it took Emily about three …show more content…

Faulkner's story could have gone many ways but it stayed focused in one place, which was told through the yes from the townspeople or someone inside emily home. It was based off of observations. Emily’s elegant home was her safe place. It was the only places Emily spent majority of the time in, apart from Sundays with Homer and that one time she went to purchase the arsenic. It is where Emily was once a young gal when her father told all those men who wanted his daughter to look elsewhere. It was all she knew, the Grierson’s home is a representation of her life. body knew what actually went on in that house, all they had was their vivid imagination. That home was isolated for everyone and filled with curiosities nobody knew about. Just like Emily she was an outsider, isolated from everyone and everything and nobody knew what went on in her head. All they had were their speculations, just like the Grierson’s home. In that home Emily grew old of age. As much as the townspeople wanted to change that home, Emily refused. Just like her home, Emily seemed old on the outside and that is all the people saw. Just as Faulkner said “When Miss Emily Grierson died, our whole town went to her funeral: the men through a sort of respectful affection for a fallen monument, the women mostly out of curiosity to see the inside of her house, which no one save an old man-servant--a combined gardener and cook--had seen in at least ten years” (Faulkner p.628). So when the townspeople finally got to go inside the Grierson home they finally saw how demented Emily really was, and they no longer had to be curious or guess what was going on inside, because it was all in the open now. Which is something it had not been not the house, nor Emily. When Emily was living there were certain people in control and Emily did not pay taxes because they felt that they owed her father something. Jefferson was changing things around, but Emily still

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