What Does This House Symbolize In A Rose For Emily

Superior Essays
Okhipo 1

Joseph Okhipo
Susan Philips
English 1102
26 October 2016
A Reading of William Faulkner
“A Rose for Emily” William Faulkner’s “A rose for Emily” story is a very fascinating one. In “A rose for Emily” Faulkner tells the story of a lady who has been through a whole lot of drama in her life. Faulkner’s choice of imagery sets a very clear tone for the main motif of the story which is death. Everyone would see a rose as a mere flower or a sign of love and beauty but in this case we see the rose representing Emily a lovable and beautiful lady who soon withers away and dies. Faulkner used
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This house signifies some form of tradition, it has been old and remained the same way ever since. Emily is the aged lady that everyone felt sorrowful for. Her father, who cared and catered for her, had once devoted a huge sum of money to the town, exempting Emily from paying any form of tax in the future. A time came when Emily was asked to pay tax and then she refused, “I have no taxes in Jefferson” (58). She wasn’t further questioned because they knew how influential her father was when he was alive. An identical situation happens when Emily goes to buy rat poisoning; the state law requires good reason for purchasing it, but Emily does not, rather she pays and …show more content…
It’s so awkward when our idols turn out to be murderers. In this situation we understand Emily’s predicament so deeply that we don’t even atmosphere the misfortune of her murdered lover. Faulkner divided this story into different parts in which a detailed description of Emily’s behavior, her intentions, what people think of her, and why she became what she is; a “murderer” is given. Talking about the Antagonists, we should be taking a look at Homer Barron (Emily’s lover),
Mr. Grierson (Emily’s father) Judge Stevens (man who helps the Grierson family) and also
The Town of Jefferson. People of the Town of Jefferson always antagonizes Emily and hastened her downfall. There are times of love, kindness and care on the part of the town, but the antagonism is vivid. There are some key conflict in “A Rose for Emily”: Emily vs Homer Barron, Emily vs the society (people of Jefferson), Emily vs the supernatural (her dead father). The first conflict occurs between Emily Grierson and Homer Barron. Emily found it so hard to get over her father’s demise, along the

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