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Short Story Analysis: "A Rose for Emily" by William Faulkner

I. A ROSE FOR EMILY

By William Faulkner

II. SYNOPSIS / SUMMARY

The funeral of Miss Emily Grierson is attended by the whole town. The women, mostly due
to curiosity, want to see the interiors of her house wherein nobody else except for an old Negro
servant has seen in ten years, at the minimum.

When she was still alive, Miss Grierson was a noble and respectable single woman. When
her father died, she became alone, and a pauper. The people pitied her.

One day, there was a very bad and unbearable smell coming from her yard. Some
neighbors complained to the mayor, and he simply advised them to tell her to clean up her place.

Miss Emily was sick for long. Her neighbors would rarely see her. But, when she had a
love interest, a gay construction worker named Homer Barron, the two of them would be spotted
together on Sunday afternoons. The townspeople were happy for her and thought she would get
married to Homer, especially when they found out she bought some men’s things. However,
after sometime, when they did not see Homer anymore, they pitied Miss Emily again because her
lover left her.

She was rumored to kill herself when she bought rat poison. But she did not. She would
still be occasionally seen outside of her house up to the time its front door started to remain
closed. The years passed, and her hair was turning gray until it became pepper-and-salt-iron-
gray.

Now she is dead. The people can now enter her house that has always been off-limits to
them prior to this time. They go to the room upstairs which nobody has seen for forty years.
After forcing the door open, they see that the room looks like a married couple’s. Then, they are
shocked to see the skeletal remains of a man on the bed. They notice that the second pillow has a
long strand of iron-gray hair.
III. SHORT STORY ELEMENTS

A. MAJOR CHARACTERS
1. Miss Emily Grierson – Protagonist, Developing
2 Her Negro servant - Flat, Static
3. Homer Barron - Flat, Static
4. The neighbors and townspeolpe - Flat, Static

B. PLOT -

a) Introduction

This short story begins with Miss Emily’s funeral. Then the “personas” use flashback, from one highlight to another,
that tell us about Miss Emily’s life.

b) Rising Action

When Miss Emily bought rat poison, the people though she would kill herself.

c) Climax

Those who forced open the closed room had a big surprise when they saw the skeleton that they suspected was
Homer Barron’s.

d) Falling action

After their initial shock was gone, the townspeople who opened the locked room saw a pillow that had a long strand
of iron-gray hair.

e) Denouement

Speculations arose, but nobody knew for sure what exactly happened, since Miss Emily had died.

C. SETTING

a) place – in a southern town somewhere in Jefferson


b) time- the late 1800's up to the early 1900's.
c) weather conditions - fine
d) social conditions- good
e) mood or atmosphere –

D. POINT OF VIEW

The Point of View used in this short story is the Omniscient Objective – The author tells the story in the third
person. It appears as though a camera is following the characters, going anywhere, and recording only what is
seen and heard. There is no comment on the characters or their thoughts. No interpretations are offered. The
reader is placed in the position of spectator without the author there to explain. The reader has to interpret events
on his own.

E. LITERARY DEVICES

In my opinion, the literary devices used in this story are Flashback, Foreshadowing, Symbolism.

Flashback: When Miss Emily died, the townspeople narrated some important highlights in her life by means of
flashbacks.

Foreshadowing: When I read the part where Miss Emily bought rat poison, but there was no mention of rats
prior to that, I thought that it was for something very important in the story. Thus, I read on with the close attention
to what that poison was really for.
Symbolism: After re-reading a few times, I strongly believe that the house, the watch, the poison, and the
matrimonial bed symbolize important things in the story. The house symbolizes Miss Emily’s being a noble person
who became a pauper, just as the elegant house became a prison cell of some sort. Then, the watch symbolizes the
timeline of the highlights or vital events in Miss Emily’s life. Meanwhile, the poison symbolizes death, and the
matrimonial bed found in the locked room symbolizes Miss Emily’s thoughts about marriage despite what the
townspeople thought of her.

F. THEME

For me, the themes Things are not always as they appear to be and also Love is blind are applicable to this
story.

G. CONFLICT

The conflicts here are External:

Man vs. Circumstances (classical) - The leading character struggles against fate, or the
circumstances of life facing him/her.

Miss Emily struggled through the harsh realities of life.

Man vs. Society (social) - The leading character struggles against ideas, practices, or customs of
other people.

The townspeople’s descriptions and perceptions about Miss Emily made her very pitiful. -
-ARV

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