A Rose For Emily Literary Analysis

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“A Rose for Emily” is a short story written by William Cuthbert Faulkner. “A Rose for Emily” takes place after the civil war era, around the same time Faulkner wrote it. Faulkner wrote the story during this time period because he grew up listening to civil war stories told by his elders, mainly his grandfather. These stories his grandfather told him inspired him to write “A Rose for Emily.” The story was written about a woman whom he never married. Faulkner did marry, but it was later in his life because he had to wait ten years for the love his of life to return to him. His wife divorced her first husband ten years after Faulkner proposed to her. She was not allowed to marry him at first because her family did not approve of his social …show more content…

In “A Rose for Emily,” Emily is perceived as aristocratic and she is assumed high on the social scale, therefore she would never marry outside her own social class. However, in reality after reading the story and discovering she killed Homer, Emily in fact could be portrayed as actually being placed in the lower class because she murdered Homer. Everyone she knew had left her, the men who wanted to court her, her mother, her father, Colonel Sartoris, and almost Homer. She murdered Homer, so she could be with him till she died. Faulkner writes in “A Rose for Emily,” “The body had apparently once lain in the attitude of an embrace, but now the long sleep that outlasts love, that conquers even the grimace of love, had cuckolded him” (550). This indicates that even through Emily never married Homer, one could say Emily 's marriage was started by Homer 's death instead of the binding words “Till Death do us part.” To compare to Faulkner 's life, Faulkner too had irony throughout his life by wanting to marry Estelle who was born into the upper class of society. The ironic part of his life was if Estelle 's family knew Faulkner would become an accomplished writer and not judged him for his place in society at the present time, she would never have to divorce her first husband whom they chose for her and deemed fit for her. In addition, throughout the story Emily is always pitied by the town people. Faulkner writes “...The old people said, poor Emily” (546). When in reality, Emily secretly could hold her own in a messed up way. She prevented her housekeeper from ever peaking into the room where she kept Homer and prevented her housekeeper from telling anyone she murdered Homer. From this implies that in an ironic way the famous line “she could get away with murder” is true for Emily because she had everyone fooled. She also never was arrested

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