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A Rose for Emily

 A Rose for Emily
type
TVTItem
 A Rose for Emily
label
A Rose for Emily
 A Rose for Emily
page
ARoseForEmily
 A Rose for Emily
comment
A short story by William Faulkner, published in the literary magazine The Forum on 30 April, 1930. It concerns the life of a certain Emily Grierson, as seen through the eyes of her neighbors, in a sleepy Deep South town.In a once-elegant, upscale neighborhood, her house is the last vestige of the grandeur of a lost era. Colonel Sartoris, the town’s previous mayor, had suspended Emily’s tax responsibilities to the town after her father’s death, justifying the action by claiming that Mr. Grierson had once lent the community a significant sum. As new town leaders take over, they make unsuccessful attempts to get Emily to resume payments. When members of the Board of Aldermen pay her a visit in the dusty and antiquated parlor, Emily reasserts the fact that she is not required to pay taxes in Jefferson and that the officials should talk to Colonel Sartoris about the matter. However, at that point, he has been dead for almost a decade. She asks her servant, Tobe, to show the men out.In section II, the narrator describes a time thirty years earlier when Emily resists another official inquiry by the town leaders after the townspeople detect a powerful odor emanating from her property. Since the death of her father, two years prior, Emily has been independent but impoverished. Her lover has recently abandoned her as well when this odor begins. As complaints mount, Judge Stevens, the mayor at the time, decides to have lime sprinkled along the foundation of the Grierson home in the middle of the night. Within a couple of weeks, the odor subsides, but the townspeople begin to pity the increasingly reclusive woman, recalling that her great-aunt had succumbed to insanity. The townspeople have always believed that the Griersons thought too highly of themselves, with Emily's father driving off the many suitors deemed not good enough to marry his daughter. With no offer of marriage in sight, she is still single by the time she turns thirty. The day after Mr. Grierson's death, the women of the town call on Emily to offer their condolences. Meeting them at the door, Emily states that her father is not dead, a charade that she keeps up for three days. She finally turns her father's body over for burial.In section III, the narrator describes a long illness that Emily suffers after this incident. The summer after her father's death, the town contracts workers to pave the sidewalks, and a construction company under the direction of Northerner Homer Barron is awarded the job. Homer soon becomes a popular figure in town and is seen taking Emily on buggy rides on Sunday afternoons, which scandalizes the town. They feel she is becoming involved with a man beneath her station. As the affair continues and her reputation is further compromised, she goes to the drugstore to purchase arsenic. She is required by law to reveal how she will use the arsenic, but she offers no explanation, and the package arrives at her house labeled “For rats.”In section IV, the narrator describes the fear that some of the townspeople have that Emily will use the poison to kill herself. Her potential marriage to Homer seems increasingly unlikely, as Homer admits that he is "not a marrying man" despite their continued Sunday ritual. The more outraged women of the town insist that the Baptist minister talk with her. After his visit, he never speaks of what happened and swears that he'll never go back. So the minister's wife writes to Emily's two cousins in Alabama, who arrive for an extended stay. Emily orders a silver toilet set monogrammed with Homer's initials and talk of the couple's marriage resumes. Homer, absent from town, is believed to be preparing for Emily's move or trying to avoid her intrusive relatives.After the cousins' departure, Homer enters the Grierson home one evening and is never seen again. Holed up in the house, Emily grows plump and gray. Aside from the occasional lesson she gives in china painting, her door remains closed to outsiders. In what becomes an annual ritual, Emily refuses to acknowledge the tax bill. She eventually closes up the top floor of the house. Except for the occasional glimpse of her in the window, nothing is heard from her until her death at age seventy-four. Only the servant is seen going in and out of the house.In section V, the narrator describes what happens after Emily dies. Her body is laid out in the parlor, and the women, town elders, and two cousins attend the service. After some time has passed, the door to a sealed upstairs room that had not been opened in forty years is broken down. The room is frozen in time, with the items for an upcoming wedding and a man's suit laid out. Homer Barron's body is stretched on the bed in an advanced state of decay. The onlookers then notice the indentation of a head in the pillow beside Barron's body and a long strand of Emily's gray hair on the pillow.
 A Rose for Emily
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2023-04-02T07:58:46Z
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2023-04-02T07:58:46Z
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Dropped link to Yandere: Not a Feature - ITEM
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DBTropes
 A Rose for Emily / int_126ce03c
type
I Was Quite a Looker
 A Rose for Emily / int_126ce03c
comment
I Was Quite a Looker: Toyed with. Emily goes from a young, slender woman, who might have had a few suitors were it not for her tyrannical father, to a reclusive, grotesque figure.
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A Rose for Emily / int_126ce03c
 A Rose for Emily / int_171b1206
type
Men Can't Keep House
 A Rose for Emily / int_171b1206
comment
Men Can't Keep House: Following her father's death, Emily entrusts the care of the house to a young Tobe. The local women scoff at the notion of a male servant doing housework: "'Just as if a man—any man—could keep a kitchen properly,' the ladies said; so they were not surprised when the smell developed."
 A Rose for Emily / int_171b1206
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 A Rose for Emily / int_21718ffc
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Deep South
 A Rose for Emily / int_21718ffc
comment
Deep South: Set in ostensibly the more "enlightened" part of this fair land, with social classes firmly in place, black servants that keep their masters' secrets, and gorgeous, stately mansions... that are riddled with decay and years out of date.
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 A Rose for Emily / int_217a1adf
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I Love the Dead
 A Rose for Emily / int_217a1adf
comment
I Love the Dead: The title character murders the man she wishes to marry, then lies next to him (long ago enough in the past for dust to settle but recent enough that the hair on the pillow is gray); the corpse is also said to have been in an embracing position.
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A Rose for Emily / int_217a1adf
 A Rose for Emily / int_251bbe0e
type
Genre Blindness
 A Rose for Emily / int_251bbe0e
comment
Genre Blindness: The people of Jefferson are in a Gothic Horror tale but treat the "romance" of Emily and Homer as the stuff of a Romance Novel. The description of events is actually rather creepy. Emily falls in love with a man that everyone else knows isn't the marrying type. Emily has purchased arsenic. Homer returns to town and enters the Grierson residence "at dusk", never to be seen again. Emily turns into a recluse for months. A foul odor of decomposition starts coming from the Grierson residence. They dismiss it as coming from the remains of an animal and helpfully provide lime to deal with the smell.
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 A Rose for Emily / int_2d428543
type
Eyes Never Lie
 A Rose for Emily / int_2d428543
comment
Eyes Never Lie: Subtle. When Emily buys arsenic, the pharmacist takes note of her "cold black eyes". He considers it another sign of her haughtiness. She is actually contemplating a murder at the time, and the look in her eyes more likely reflects her cold calculations.
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 A Rose for Emily / int_2e121b44
type
Southern Gentleman
 A Rose for Emily / int_2e121b44
comment
Southern Gentleman: Judge Stevens, one of the Mayors of Jefferson, insists on good manners towards the ladies. When the city council receives complains of a foul odor coming from the Grierson house, the youngest alderman suggests simply notifying the owner of the problem. The Judge shoots him down by pointing "Dammit, sir, will you accuse a lady to her face of smelling bad?"
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 A Rose for Emily / int_382c67f0
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Affair Hair
 A Rose for Emily / int_382c67f0
comment
Affair Hair: The story ends with a strand of gray hair found next to a body that's been dead for decades.
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 A Rose for Emily / int_38bb862f
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Don't You Dare Pity Me!
 A Rose for Emily / int_38bb862f
comment
Don't You Dare Pity Me!: Never stated, but it's mentioned that Emily bristles every time she catches wind of the townsfolk referring to her as "Poor Emily."
 A Rose for Emily / int_38bb862f
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 A Rose for Emily / int_3c0a4666
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Noodle Incident
 A Rose for Emily / int_3c0a4666
comment
Noodle Incident: A clergyman is persuaded to call on the reclusive title character. "He would never divulge what happened during that interview, but he refused to go back again." Considering Emily's unsettling disconnect with reality, this is not surprising.
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A Rose for Emily / int_3c0a4666
 A Rose for Emily / int_3d5547b0
type
Perfect Poison
 A Rose for Emily / int_3d5547b0
comment
Perfect Poison: Subverted. Emily doesn't really care if the poison is traceable or not. She picks arsenic as the poison because she has heard that it is effective in killing. That is enough for her.
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 A Rose for Emily / int_401089da
type
Offstage Villainy
 A Rose for Emily / int_401089da
comment
Offstage Villainy: Deciding that her relationship with Homer is "a disgrace to the town", the local women convince the local Baptist minister to visit Emily and set her straight. They overlook that Emily is Episcopalian and probably don't know how intimidating Emily can be. What happened in this meeting is not explained, but the minister never re-enters the Grierson residence, and refuses to share any details of what happened between them. What Emily said or did to him is left to the reader's imagination.
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 A Rose for Emily / int_41dce76e
type
Small Town Boredom
 A Rose for Emily / int_41dce76e
comment
Small Town Boredom: One explanation with the town's preoccupation and near-obsession with Emily. For a woman who spends most of her life as a recluse, whenever Emily acts in any way the locals are there to discuss about it. As scholar Judith Fetterley observed, the people of Jefferson are in turns "curious, jealous, spiteful, pitying, partisan, proud, disapproving, and admiring" of Emily. Soon after her death, her house is invaded by visitors who search for her secrets with a voyeuristic attitude. Perhaps they are so bored that they obsess over the little drama of her life?
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 A Rose for Emily / int_438cb385
type
Overprotective Dad
 A Rose for Emily / int_438cb385
comment
Overprotective Dad: The story paints the image of Emily in the background, and her father at the door with his back to her, bullwhip in hand. It is implied this is why she never got engaged.
 A Rose for Emily / int_438cb385
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A Rose for Emily / int_438cb385
 A Rose for Emily / int_44749cee
type
Nothing but Skin and Bones
 A Rose for Emily / int_44749cee
comment
Nothing but Skin and Bones: In the period leading to the murder, the already-slender Emily further loses weight. The pharmacist notes the changes in her face, "the flesh of which was strained across the temples and about the eyesockets". Starving herself before the kill?
 A Rose for Emily / int_44749cee
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 A Rose for Emily / int_4655ec83
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Important Haircut
 A Rose for Emily / int_4655ec83
comment
Important Haircut: Emily cuts her hair after her Overprotective Dad dies.
 A Rose for Emily / int_4655ec83
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 A Rose for Emily / int_4e7c4536
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Wham Line
 A Rose for Emily / int_4e7c4536
comment
Wham Line: "The man himself lay in the bed."
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 A Rose for Emily / int_4f3c14ca
type
Go Mad from the Isolation
 A Rose for Emily / int_4f3c14ca
comment
Go Mad from the Isolation: It's implied that her father's isolating dominion, followed by the townsfolk themselves keeping her at arm's length out of respect for her "station," did Emily's sanity no good.
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 A Rose for Emily / int_52989fee
type
Narrator
 A Rose for Emily / int_52989fee
comment
Narrator: The narrator represents the town of Jefferson itself but remains unnamed. He/she may be a singular narrator or a collective voice.
 A Rose for Emily / int_52989fee
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A Rose for Emily / int_52989fee
 A Rose for Emily / int_53e1ce4e
type
Please Wake Up
 A Rose for Emily / int_53e1ce4e
comment
Please Wake Up: When her father dies, Emily insists that he yet lives and refuses to part with the body. It takes three days of pressure by the local priests and doctors to convince Emily to be parted from the corpse. This seems to be only the first time she gets clingy with a corpse.
 A Rose for Emily / int_53e1ce4e
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 A Rose for Emily / int_5a365ed2
type
Incompatible Orientation
 A Rose for Emily / int_5a365ed2
comment
Incompatible Orientation: Homer eventually admitted that he liked men, but Emily was still in love with him.
 A Rose for Emily / int_5a365ed2
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 A Rose for Emily / int_5c24cfa1
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Love Will Lead You Back
 A Rose for Emily / int_5c24cfa1
comment
Love Will Lead You Back: Subverted. It is strongly implied that Emily murdered her lover and spent her time in "mourning" sleeping next to his corpse.
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 A Rose for Emily / int_5e2e55e4
type
The Casanova
 A Rose for Emily / int_5e2e55e4
comment
The Casanova: One interpretation of Homer Barron's character is that he seduces a town's women and/or young men, then abandons them and moves to the next town. That is why he is not "a marrying man". If true, it clearly backfired in Emily's case.
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 A Rose for Emily / int_627264e0
type
Death Glare
 A Rose for Emily / int_627264e0
comment
Death Glare: The pharmacist is at first reluctant to sell arsenic, and also reminds Emily that she is legally required to state the reasons for doing so. Emily tilts her head back and silently stares into his eyes. He soon looks away and complies with her wishes but notably avoids any further contact with her.
 A Rose for Emily / int_627264e0
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If I Can't Have You…
 A Rose for Emily / int_6774150c
comment
If I Can't Have You…: One explanation of why she killed the lover who would not marry her.
 A Rose for Emily / int_6774150c
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A Rose for Emily / int_6774150c
 A Rose for Emily / int_6a25c388
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Mummies at the Dinner Table
 A Rose for Emily / int_6a25c388
comment
Mummies at the Dinner Table: Mummies in bed, even.
 A Rose for Emily / int_6a25c388
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 A Rose for Emily / int_6bda9a30
type
Meaningful Name
 A Rose for Emily / int_6bda9a30
comment
Meaningful Name: Noel Polk has argued that the name "Homer Barron" should be read with the two names in reverse order: "Barron Homer" = "barren home". Emily is the last person ever born in the Grierson home, and her life is barren.
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A Rose for Emily / int_6bda9a30
 A Rose for Emily / int_6eae387f
type
Dress Code
 A Rose for Emily / int_6eae387f
comment
Dress Code: The locals remember Colonel Sartoris's term as Mayor because of an edict enforcing a dress code for "Negro" women: "no Negro woman should appear on the streets without an apron".
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A Rose for Emily / int_6eae387f
 A Rose for Emily / int_715704e5
type
Jigsaw Puzzle Plot
 A Rose for Emily / int_715704e5
comment
Jigsaw Puzzle Plot: The story is comprised of five parts which are mostly out of order. For those who don't pick apart and reassemble the events, the fate of Homer Barron, and what Emily had to do with it, is a perplexing matter. The fact that the narrator (implied to be the townspeople) has a severely limited understanding of Emily's personal life and occasionally relies on conjecture to guess her actions doesn't help much either.
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 A Rose for Emily / int_7a0374eb
type
Impoverished Patrician
 A Rose for Emily / int_7a0374eb
comment
Impoverished Patrician: Emily has inherited an "august name" connecting her to the local aristocracy and the family house, but little to no cash. The locals consider her a pauper.
 A Rose for Emily / int_7a0374eb
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A Rose for Emily / int_7a0374eb
 A Rose for Emily / int_7efd2e30
type
Expository Hairstyle Change
 A Rose for Emily / int_7efd2e30
comment
Expository Hairstyle Change: Emily's hair changes at important points in the story.
 A Rose for Emily / int_7efd2e30
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 A Rose for Emily / int_7f92a41c
type
Game Between Heirs
 A Rose for Emily / int_7f92a41c
comment
Game Between Heirs: Backstory element. When "old lady Wyatt, the crazy woman" died, Mr. Grierson and his kin from Alabama fought over her estate. The dispute led the inter-related families to sever relations for years.
 A Rose for Emily / int_7f92a41c
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A Rose for Emily / int_7f92a41c
 A Rose for Emily / int_823c6e3e
type
Large Ham
 A Rose for Emily / int_823c6e3e
comment
Large Ham: Homer Barron is described as a big man with a loud voice which can often be heard from afar, either cussing his workers or laughing with his companions. He is also a charismatic fellow who seeks to acquaint himself with as many people as possible.
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A Rose for Emily / int_823c6e3e
 A Rose for Emily / int_83b44e80
type
Straight Gay
 A Rose for Emily / int_83b44e80
comment
Straight Gay: Homer Barron is a manly construction foreman. He also likes men, particularly "the younger men in the Elks' Club".
 A Rose for Emily / int_83b44e80
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 A Rose for Emily / int_8504b817
type
Where the Hell Is Springfield?
 A Rose for Emily / int_8504b817
comment
Where the Hell Is Springfield?: Faulkner does not clarify the location of the town called Jefferson. It is mentioned that there are Confederate veterans in town, pointing to one of the 11 states of the Confederacy, and Alabama is clearly named as a different state to the one the locals live in.
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 A Rose for Emily / int_863fa679
type
What Happened to the Mouse?
 A Rose for Emily / int_863fa679
comment
What Happened to the Mouse?: Tobe has spent most of his life in the Grierson house and is as socially isolated as his employer. When she dies, he opens the front door to visitors and then flees through the back door. His fate is never explained. Where is the old man heading?
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 A Rose for Emily / int_87629455
type
No Communities Were Harmed
 A Rose for Emily / int_87629455
comment
No Communities Were Harmed: There is a theory that Faulkner used "Jefferson" as an alias for his native Oxford, Mississippi. There is even mention of an American Civil War battle in its vicinity, and of a cemetery filled with Union and Confederate casualties. There was a Battle of Holly Springs in the vicinity of Oxford.
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 A Rose for Emily / int_916c72b3
type
Rule of Symbolism
 A Rose for Emily / int_916c72b3
comment
Rule of Symbolism: The decay of Emily's looks and estate and sanity mirror the decay of the antebellum southern culture.
 A Rose for Emily / int_916c72b3
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A Rose for Emily / int_916c72b3
 A Rose for Emily / int_939bf44a
type
Personal Effects Reveal
 A Rose for Emily / int_939bf44a
comment
Personal Effects Reveal: The inhabitants find Homer Barron's possessions—bought for him by Emily, as an intended wedding gift—after Emily's death. The long-deceased owner is still present...
 A Rose for Emily / int_939bf44a
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 A Rose for Emily / int_9853e107
type
Elective Mute
 A Rose for Emily / int_9853e107
comment
Elective Mute: Over the course of many years, Tobe grew into one of these. "He talked to no one, probably not even to her, for his voice had grown harsh and rusty, as if from disuse." This frustrates the curious people who attempt to pry information from him.
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A Rose for Emily / int_9853e107
 A Rose for Emily / int_9d12bbc1
type
Foreshadowing
 A Rose for Emily / int_9d12bbc1
comment
Foreshadowing: Emily's refusal to part with her father's corpse until ordered to by the city hints that she doesn't take separation well... and is also not bothered by keeping a dead body in her house.
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A Rose for Emily / int_9d12bbc1
 A Rose for Emily / int_9e1548b4
type
Old Retainer
 A Rose for Emily / int_9e1548b4
comment
Old Retainer: Tobe "the Negro" (!). He works well into his own old age as servant, cook, and gardener to the old woman.
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A Rose for Emily / int_9e1548b4
 A Rose for Emily / int_9ed6761e
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Death by Woman Scorned
 A Rose for Emily / int_9ed6761e
comment
Death by Woman Scorned: The relationship between Emily and Homer is ill-defined. If she first offered her heart to him and then she found out about the "young men" he was seeing, this would be a textbook case.
 A Rose for Emily / int_9ed6761e
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 A Rose for Emily / int_9f970427
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Secret-Keeper
 A Rose for Emily / int_9f970427
comment
Secret-Keeper: Tobe is the one confidant of Emily and probably well-aware of what she kept in the locked room. His hasty retreat and disappearance hints at fearing repercussions following the discovery of the corpse. In any case, what would this Deep South town do to a "Negro" involved in the murder of a white man, however peripheral this involvement is?
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A Rose for Emily / int_9f970427
 A Rose for Emily / int_a70223
type
Karma Houdini
 A Rose for Emily / int_a70223
comment
Karma Houdini: Emily both gets away with murder and is the most prominent tax evader in town. She never suffers any real consequence for her crimes.
 A Rose for Emily / int_a70223
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A Rose for Emily / int_a70223
 A Rose for Emily / int_a7aef9ff
type
Obfuscating Stupidity
 A Rose for Emily / int_a7aef9ff
comment
Obfuscating Stupidity: The town authorities want Emily to start paying her taxes and send representatives to convince her. She acts out-of-touch with reality in the meeting and constantly mentions long-dead Colonel Sartoris as if he's still alive. The representatives retreat in defeat. Yet the supposedly eccentric, crazy lady gets exactly what she wants from the meeting. The narrator itself points out that "'she' vanquished them, horse and foot, just as she had vanquished their fathers thirty years before". Judith Fetterley has argued that this is intentional and that Emily plays dumb to keep them out of balance. In other words, she is crazy like a fox.
 A Rose for Emily / int_a7aef9ff
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A Rose for Emily / int_a7aef9ff
 A Rose for Emily / int_a7b3134
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I Just Want to Be Loved
 A Rose for Emily / int_a7b3134
comment
I Just Want to Be Loved: According to Faulkner, Emily just wanted to "love and be loved and have a family of her own," but her father kept her isolated from the town until his death in her thirties. By then, the town considered her too much of an Old Maid and the Last of Her Kind.
 A Rose for Emily / int_a7b3134
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A Rose for Emily / int_a7b3134
 A Rose for Emily / int_b11ac9f5
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Abusive Parents
 A Rose for Emily / int_b11ac9f5
comment
Abusive Parents: Emily's father is so domineering and protective of her that she does not allow any of the local men her age to court her and she grows into a reclusive, friendless Old Maid. Word of God states his reasoning wasn't worry for her well-being but because he wanted to keep her as his housemaid.
 A Rose for Emily / int_b11ac9f5
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A Rose for Emily / int_b11ac9f5
 A Rose for Emily / int_b58c51d8
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My Beloved Smother
 A Rose for Emily / int_b58c51d8
comment
My Beloved Smother: Gender-flipped. Mr. Grierson is controlling and domineering, drives away suitors for his daughter as if threatened by them, and prevents Emily from leaving the house even when that defies social conventions. A few passages imply that he exerts this influence even beyond his death, thwarting her chances at happiness.
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A Rose for Emily / int_b58c51d8
 A Rose for Emily / int_b5dded87
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Gossipy Hens
 A Rose for Emily / int_b5dded87
comment
Gossipy Hens: Once Emily and Homer start spending time together, as the narrator puts it: "the whispering began". The unnamed narrator, representing the women of Jefferson and relaying what is essentially local gossip to the reader, counts as well.
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A Rose for Emily / int_b5dded87
 A Rose for Emily / int_c0961831
type
Interrupted Suicide
 A Rose for Emily / int_c0961831
comment
Interrupted Suicide: Averted in a disturbing matter. While Emily buys arsenic, much of the town believes she is about to commit suicide. They decide not to interfere, as they agree it would be a proper solution to her situation as an Old Maid and very likely a ruined one at that. She is still about 30 years old.
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A Rose for Emily / int_c0961831
 A Rose for Emily / int_c335b9ec
type
Irony
 A Rose for Emily / int_c335b9ec
comment
Irony: All the inhabitants of Jefferson knew that Homer Barron was the only man who ever had a relationship with Emily Grierson and that if two words could define Emily since her thirties, those words would be “Old Maid”. But when she died at seventy-four, the oldest men remembered her as one of the girls they used to court when they were young due to a combination of Nostalgia Filter and Shrouded in Myth.
 A Rose for Emily / int_c335b9ec
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A Rose for Emily / int_c335b9ec
 A Rose for Emily / int_c39846a3
type
Pride
 A Rose for Emily / int_c39846a3
comment
Pride: The locals find fault with the excessive pride of the Griersons, who reportedly "held themselves a little too high for what they really were". One interpretation as to why the locals essentially allowed Emily to live off the grid and do whatever she wanted is because she was a link of sorts to the glory days of the pre-Civil War South. No matter how her old plantation manor decayed, they preferred it to the ramshackle shops that came up all over the town after the War.
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A Rose for Emily / int_c39846a3
 A Rose for Emily / int_c452da2f
type
Southern Gothic
 A Rose for Emily / int_c452da2f
comment
Southern Gothic: Could well be the poster child of this trope. Emily Grierson's mansion, a symbol of better days long past, is described in the most wretched terms of rot and decay—and the house hides terrible secrets.
 A Rose for Emily / int_c452da2f
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A Rose for Emily / int_c452da2f
 A Rose for Emily / int_c5385ad9
type
Horrible Judge of Character
 A Rose for Emily / int_c5385ad9
comment
Horrible Judge of Character: The entire town towards Emily. They ignore key aspects of her personality and the narrator(s) typically misinterpret her actions.
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 A Rose for Emily / int_c63e5338
type
It Runs in the Family
 A Rose for Emily / int_c63e5338
comment
It Runs in the Family: The locals of Jefferson believe this is the problem with Emily. They recall that "old lady Wyatt, her great-aunt, had gone completely crazy".
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A Rose for Emily / int_c63e5338
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type
Freudian Excuse
 A Rose for Emily / int_c868a42a
comment
Freudian Excuse: According to Word of God, all Emily wanted was to "love and be loved and have a family of her own," but her tyrannical father chased off all potential suitors because he selfishly wanted to keep her as his housemaid. By the time he died in her thirties, the town considered her too old and too rich for any of them to marry and felt it would only be "proper" if she remained a spinster or committed suicide. No wonder she latched onto the first man to show her the slightest interest, then cracked when he rejected her.
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A Rose for Emily / int_c868a42a
 A Rose for Emily / int_c914e68d
type
Cigar Chomper
 A Rose for Emily / int_c914e68d
comment
Cigar Chomper: Homer Barron is described with a cigar in his teeth and a whip in his hands.
 A Rose for Emily / int_c914e68d
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A Rose for Emily / int_c914e68d
 A Rose for Emily / int_ca063422
type
Disease Bleach
 A Rose for Emily / int_ca063422
comment
Disease Bleach: Six months following the "departure" of Homer, Emily re-establishes contact with the locals. Her hair has turned grey while she is still in her early thirties. A stressful few months, perhaps?
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type
Rose-Tinted Narrative
 A Rose for Emily / int_d5121164
comment
Rose-Tinted Narrative: Deconstruction of this trope applied to the antebellum southern US.
 A Rose for Emily / int_d5121164
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A Rose for Emily / int_d5121164
 A Rose for Emily / int_dcdde3b
type
Inherent in the System
 A Rose for Emily / int_dcdde3b
comment
Inherent in the System: Emily could and would not have done the things she did had the town not expected her to strictly adhere to decayed social mores and had not allowed her to dodge taxes and live alone in an impoverished and abandoned estate all her life just because they themselves wanted to uphold the last relic of the Antebellum South.
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 A Rose for Emily / int_e34400ab
type
Ambiguously Gay
 A Rose for Emily / int_e34400ab
comment
Ambiguously Gay: It's never made completely clear whether Homer Barron is actually homosexual or if he simply prefers having a good time at the bar with the guys every evening to getting married and settling down. Or for that matter, if he's bisexual and enjoys women enough to date them but won't commit to a lifelong relationship.
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 A Rose for Emily / int_e542d80a
type
Gonk
 A Rose for Emily / int_e542d80a
comment
Gonk: Emily in her old age. She is mentioned as slender in her youth. Never leaving the house may have something to do with the excess weight she gained. "She looked bloated, like a body long submerged in motionless water, and of that pallid hue. Her eyes, lost in the fatty ridges of her face, looked like two small pieces of coal pressed into a lump of dough..."
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 A Rose for Emily / int_f5a3e496
type
Suspiciously Similar Substitute
 A Rose for Emily / int_f5a3e496
comment
Suspiciously Similar Substitute: In-story example. There are two domineering masculine figures in the story, both depicted with a horsewhip in their hands. Both die and the female protagonist gets clingy with their corpses. Many scholars and readers have pointed out that Homer Barron is suspiciously similar to Mr. Grierson, and some have argued that Emily viewed him as a substitute for her father.
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type
Love Makes You Crazy
 A Rose for Emily / int_f96f8980
comment
Love Makes You Crazy: Played with. The townsfolk regard high-born Emily running around with a workman to have lost her head in love. Her later actions prove she was definitely cracked, but she might have been cracked well before falling in love.
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type
Old Maid
 A Rose for Emily / int_ff2ceef1
comment
Old Maid: Emily's father kept her from marrying as long as he lived, and when he died she was considered a spinster in the making. After Homer vanishes without a trace, the townspeople refer to her and treat her as an old maid. And it's clear that Emily despises the condescension of the phrase "Poor Emily."
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ItemName
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A Rose for Emily

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 A Rose for Emily
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American Literature (N to S) / int_d0fc9b48
 A Rose for Emily
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Expository Hairstyle Change / int_d0fc9b48
 A Rose for Emily
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I Love the Dead / int_d0fc9b48
 A Rose for Emily
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Love Makes You Crazy / int_d0fc9b48
 A Rose for Emily
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Old Maid / int_d0fc9b48
 A Rose for Emily
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Short Story / int_d0fc9b48
 WilliamFaulkner
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A Rose for Emily
 A Rose for Emily
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Affair Hair / int_d0fc9b48