Literary Analysis Of A Rose For Emily

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The short story “A Rose for Emily” written by William Faulkner conveyed a message of love through a young female’s psychological point of view. Published in 1930, “A Rose for Emily” has many things to represent the path of love for one’s father. Miss Emily had a lot of love for her father, since her mother was not in her life at the time, so when Emily’s father passed away, she would do anything to get her father back. This helps to explain why Emily did what she did. Faulkner introduced many key items to help force the importance to the reader about each part of the story. During the piece of literature “A Rose for Emily” there were many symbols that conveyed the message of love, these symbols were the house that Miss Emily was living in, the arsenic that was used the kill Miss Emily’s love interest, and the hair that was found in the bed where the dead man lay. Throughout the story we see in our minds the outside of the house, like the people looking in on their lives, so we do not get the picture of what is truly happening inside the house. For instance, the descriptions were about the outside of the house, and not the interior of the house. Faulkner writes, “It was a big, squarish frame house that had once been white, decorated with cupolas (structures on the roof) and spires and scrolled balconies in the heavily lightsome style of the seventies” (Faulkner 720). This helps dictate the house as a main symbol because it allows for the house to be characterized as something looked bad upon, that the townspeople could judge Grierson family for. After Miss Emily’s father passed away, Miss Emily felt as if no one could come into the house and she couldn’t leave the house, allowing for people to make their own assumptions causing Miss Emily, her father, and the house look bad itself. Faulkner also writes

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