Love And Romance In William Faulkner's A Rose For Emily

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Oscar Wilde, an Irish poet, in a short story once exclaimed, “Always! That is a dreadful word. It makes me shudder when I hear it. Women are so fond of using it. They spoil every romance by trying to make it last forever”. Stretching back eons, humans constantly search for love and romance, and it is the center of instrumental literature such as Romeo and Juliet. However romance and love isn’t built to last, and inescapably decays. Most individuals rebel against the thought that romance is unable to last forever, because the alternative is that one is truly alone in the cruel world. It is important to note that love and romance doesn’t always involve two human beings, one can feel love and romance for a nation, idea, or organization.
William Faulkner (1897-1962), is a writer who constructs layers of love and romance with a dark twist. Born in Mississippi in 1897, Faulkner grew up in the aftermath of the American Civil War and experienced the failed reconstruction of the South. One of his short stories A Rose for Emily Faulkner combines his knowledge of the fading of the South …show more content…

Starting with the collective narrative of the townspeople, the social class disagreements in the South. Furthermore, Emily Grierson’s house alludes to the stubborn denial of the decay of the romanized Southern culture. In addition, the repression of women in the South is shown in Emily murdering Homer Barron. No writer deals with the romance in life and death than Edgar Allan Poe, he once wrote, “The boundaries which divide Life from Death are at best shadowy and vague. Who shall say where the one ends, and where the other begins?”. The line between Emily and her dead lover is vague and blurry, as in all love, and who is one to judge the actions of a woman desperate not to let all she hoped and longed for to slip out of her

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