A Rose for Emily—Essay
The short story A Rose for Emily, by William Faulkner first comes off as a disturbing story. When you realize that Miss Emily Grierson, who is the main character in this story, kills the man she’s though to be in love with, all you can really think is that she’s crazy. I think the conflict in the story is Miss Emily not being able to find love. With her father not giving her a chance to date, thinking that there was no one good enough for her. Then, the only man she has been able to love dies, which is her father. Once she has fallen “in love”, she murders her lover. Miss Emily’s necessity for love has caused her to be unable to distinguish fantasy with reality.
Miss Emily’s father though that no man was worthy of his daughter. He would not let her date. I think he thought she deserved a better life than what they had. He wanted her to marry someone with money, with class, someone she could have a real future with. He probably didn’t want her to stay to live there. Live the life he did, he just wanted t he best for her. Most likely Miss Emily agreed, bec...
Overspending by Americans in the Roaring Twenties, the increase in bank offered credit, the rise and final crash of the stock market all took part in causing the Great Depression (“The Great Depression”, n.d.). These were times the wealthy saved their money and the middle class had taken on too much debt putting them in the same place as the poverty-stricken. Proceeds in this time made by the owners of the manufactures and other profitable companies were held close at hand. Workers couldn’t keep up with the times nor were their pockets becoming larger at the larger demands were upon them; thus, most losing their jobs in the end. Disbursement of monies was hugely lopsided and President Hoover with his minimalist approach did not try to correct this. When he won his election, he had led the nation to believe the U.S. was well on its way to ending poverty altogether; however, within an instant, this dream and his words fell short. His support from the people lowered every year he was in office and finally crashed as did the stock market.
. An expansionary monetary policy would have created a little strong inflation. Instead, the fed protected the dollar's value and created immense deflation which helped turning a recession into a decade-long depression. Many people were rubbed out, selling businesses and losing their life savings. That's because when the stock market started falling, brokers suddenly called in their loans. People had to struggle to find enough money to pay for their margins. The subsequent depression destroyed the us economy. The index for industrial production fell by 14.7% between august 1929 to october 1929. The index fell by another 21% by december 1930 in the u.s. industrial unemployment rate rose 3.3 times in u.s. from 7.9% in 1921-29 to 26.1% in 1930-38.
Back in the day when I was very little, I remember that my dad used to take care of me. He would never let me run around the house when glass could off break and hurt me. As I kept growing up my father started to give more freedom but also gave me more responsibilities; like he wanted me to do the chores of the house, not all of them but some. I knew they were not mine to do but I still help. When I went off to college and I had to do all by myself, I realize that my father did good on making me do my laundry, chores and etc., when I was young. Besides I knew that I had to do my chores for me to go out with friends. Although I had this kind of responsibilities at a young age I can say that it helped in life. But because some parents overprotective their children and they are not exposing to real life, children might not know how to function in society when their parents die.
The Great Depression was an ten-year economic crisis that took place from 1929 to 1939, and proved to be the deepest and longest-lasting economic downfall of the Western industrialized world. It left millions of people unemployed (causing the unemployment rate to skyrocket from 3 percent to nearly 25 percent), raised interest rates, caused divorce rates to raise, lowered birth rates--however, not all people were affected by it. Nearly forty percent of the country did not feel any of the hardships faced by the remaining sixty percent, and were oblivious to the hardships that they faced.
Lust is destructive. It is easy to become accustomed to the feel of lust, yet difficult to escape its entangling grasp. Just as thorns act as a barrier for predators from a rose, so lust stands in the way of those desiring love. In William Faulkner's short story, "A Rose for Emily," the sheer, engulfing power of lust is highlighted through Emily Grierson, a prude, southern woman of the high class, who will do anything to make her sweetheart remain with her, even if that means murder. Emily's past of living a controlled life contributes greatly to the relentless pursuit of her own desires for love; she lives a seemingly free life that, unbeknownst to Emily, is ultimately controlled by the destructive power of lust.
The Great Depression is one of the most well known phenomenons to happen in the U.S. The Great Depression was an economic downfall that lasted 10 years. Leading to more than half the banks in the U.S. to fail. The unemployment rate began to raise dangerously high along with the rate of people becoming homeless. People were frantick but the crash was so large that there was no coming up from it anytime soon.
William Faulkner’s “A Rose for Emily" was originally published April 30, 1930 in an issue of Forum. It was his first short story to be published in a major magazine. "A Rose for Emily" is the story of an abnormal older woman, Emily Grierson. The unnamed narrator who of which sounds like the town speaking (certainly does not sound like any certain individual)really details the bizarre circumstances of Emily's life and her unusual relationships between her father, lover, and the whole town of Jefferson, and the horrible secrets she is hiding. Most readers have found this story to be the most understandable by Faulkner, and it is favored for its gruesome ending. Faulkner uses Flashback, Foreshadowing and suspense to symbolize and show the story's Tragedy, Pride, and loneliness.
William Faulker’s "A Rose for Emily", is a story told from the viewpoint of a
Miss Emily was part of the highly revered Grierson family, the aristocrats of the town. They held themselves to a higher standard, and nothing or nobody was ever good enough for them. Faulkner fist gives us the clue of Emily's mental condition when he refers to Emily's great-aunt, Lady Wyatt. Faulkner tells us that Lady Wyatt had "gone completely crazy" (Faulkner 93). Due to the higher standards they had set for themselves, they believed that they were too high for that and then distanced themselv...
Miss Emily’s mother is not discussed in the story, so it is difficult to make any relative assumptions. Her father had turned away any potential suitors, so when her father dies Miss Emily is left alone except for a Negro manservant that hardly speaks. The narrator describes Miss Emily as physically “slender” while her father is living (302). She does not deal
Miss Emily is a woman who had the whole town wondering what she was doing, but did not allow anyone the pleasure of finding out. Once the men that she cared about in life deserted her, either by death or by simply leaving her, she hid out and did not allow anyone to get close to her. Miss Emily was indeed afraid to confront the reality that Backman discusses. Since she did not want to accept the fact that the people she cared about were gone, she hid in her house and did not go out. She was the perfect example of a woman alienated by a society controlled by men who make trouble for her instead of helping her.
Emily was kept confined from all that surrounded her. Her father had given the town folks a large amount of money which caused Emily and her father to feel superior to others. “Grierson’s held themselves a little too high for what they really were” (Faulkner). Emily’s attitude had developed as a stuck-up and stubborn girl and her father was to blame for this attitude. Emily was a normal girl with aspirations of growing up and finding a mate that she could soon marry and start a family, but this was all impossible because of her father. The father believed that, “none of the younger man were quite good enough for Miss Emily,” because of this Miss Emily was alone. Emily was in her father’s shadow for a very long time. She lived her li...
Emily’s isolation is evident because after the men that cared about her deserted her, either by death or simply leaving her, she hid from society and didn’t allow anyone to get close to her. Miss Emily is afraid to confront reality. She seems to live in a sort of fantasy world where death has no meaning. Emily refuses to accept or recognize the death of her father, and the fact that the world around her is changing.
Miss Emily’s refusal to change all started when her father had passed away and when asked about it she was in denial and “she told them her father was not dead.” She didn’t want to come to the realization that the only person in her life that loved her and protected her was gone. The fact that he was so controlling of her life and how she lived made Miss Emily afraid of what was going to happen next. She wasn’t used to making her own life choices.
As a child, Emily was unable make friends or even play outside because her father held his family to a much higher standard than other townspeople “The Griersons held themselves a little too high for what they really were” (Faulkner 36). Emily’s father, selfishly held Emily back from living, loving, and freedom. She was unable to find a soul mate because her father believed that “None of the young men were quite good enough for Miss Emily and such” (Faulkner 36). Because of this, Emily stuck close to the only man she’s ever known like a newborn to its mother. Emily and her father had such a close bond that when he died, for days she refused to believe he was dead, and she also refused to let the townspeople dispose of the body. For the townspeople, Emily’s reaction to her father’s death was quite normal, but for readers it was our first glimpse at her necrophilia.