The Importance Of Death In 'A Rose For Emily' By William Faulkner

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The death of a fallen monument They say love makes us do crazy things and it could even last forever. Apparently, Emily Grierson got the memo, and as a result her desire to be loved pushed her to the limit to stop time and relinquish an astonishing occurrence to the readers. William Faulkner, in his story “ A Rose for Emily,” delivers a dramatic change between an older and newer generation, in which Emily is stuck between. Faulkner, combining darkness, and torment in the lifestyle of emily, proves how society can as well destroy the life of others with a blink of an eye. As a victim herself: Emily was left to deal with her own sorrows along creating a world where she is reliving the past that benefits her behaviour. In “A Rose for Emily”, William uses the setting to reveal the traits of Emily and the townspeople. As the setting changes throughout the story it gives the readers different aspects of everyones high expectation towards Emily and the burden that she had to go through to carry her head high. For instance, the town people never like the thought of Emily marrying Homer b...

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