Saturday, April 18, 2020
Rose For Emily Essays (875 words) - A Rose For Emily, Emily Grierson
  Rose For Emily  The Reason the main character, Emily Grierson, in William Faulkner's "A Rose  for Emily" murdered her lover, Homer Barron, was a combined contribution of  the society she lived in. The cousin's snootiness and high expectations of the    Grierson family legacy made it difficult for Emily and Homer to be together as a  couple. "The two female cousins were more Grierson than Miss Emily had ever  been." (5) The cousins would keep Emily in line because they were more  aristrocatic, therefore forcing Emily into keeping the family name pure by not  being with a labor worker who often got drunk and liked men. The cousins had a  talk with Emily, which drove Homer out for a short period of time. For fear of    Homer leaving her, she ventured to the local pharmacy to purchase arsenic (then  used as rat poison) for what she believed might be the only way to keep the man  she loved from leaving her. Emily's father scared all her suitors away,  believing that she was too good for all of them, which in turn left her single  at a very old age. Emily's over-possessive, father traumatized her into  believing that she would be alone all of her life. "The ?Patrimony of a  man' destroys Emily as her father smothers her with over-protectiveness. He  prevents her from courting anymore" (Internet 1). Her father never gave her  the opportunity of a happy, joyful family life, which every person deserves. Her  father never gave her the opportunity of a happy, joyful family life, which  every person deserves. When her father died and she found someone she liked, she  instantly became attached to this man and was not willing to let him go.    "Emily decides she will be vindictive, she will have her man"(Internet 2).    Emily chose the first man possible in a sort of way to lash back at the father  who never allowed her to have what she desired the most, companionship. With her  father now deceased, she had complete freedom in choosing and keeping any suitor  she found acceptable. Having never had the opportunity, Emily had no concept of  how to treat and be a companion to the opposite sex. This would explain the  unbreakable attachment to the first man who came along, Homer Barron. In a way  she took what she could get at that moment thinking that there might never be  another chance for her again, therefore she settled for Homer Barron. All of the  town's pity, gossip, and assumptions about Emily and her family brought on  more stress and insanity about keeping the Grierson name aristocratic and clean.    In essence, she was living up to the family standards set by that of her local  society. "Her father and the townsfolk that see her as an untouchable idol  perpetrate this dementia; the loneliness that they force her to endure is  maddening" (Internet 1). At times the town felt sorrow for her and had  thoughts of consoling her but never actually put them into action. They always  let her endure everything she was suffering on her own. Although they no longer  had any reason to be, the women of the town still felt a pang of jealousy  towards her family aristocracy and history. The women, to satisfy their own  consciences, acted as if they actually felt sympathy for Emily, where in all  honesty, not a single one cared for her in any way. The town merely wanted to  put up a false front. Homer Baron, who was very inconsiderate and casual about  her past, contributed to his own murder. Homer Barron was a bi-sexual, Yankee,  drunk who was going to leave her after he had his way with her. She knew this  from the town's gossip and she was growing more and more insecure about Homer.    "We can imagine, however the outcome might have been had Homer Barron, who was  not the marrying man, succeeded, in the town's eyes, in seducing her and then  deserting her." (Short Story criticisms 150) Homer was seen drinking at the  bar with men and it was known that he was interested in men. Homer was never  really intending to stay long term with Emily. He was just a passer by who was  only there for road construction. "And when she lost him she could see that  for her that was the end of life, there was nothing left except to grow older,  alone, solitary." (Internet 2) The thing she feared the most was being alone  with no companion. Emily had endured all of this    
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