Can someone help me?
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Maria Vargas
Prof. Fernandez
ENC 1102 (Term B)
9 November 2020
‘‘A Rose for Emily’’ Character Analysis
In the story ‘‘A Rose for Emily’’, written by William Faulkner, the background information that
is given about the different characters that are in the story is essential for the plot, and helps the
reader to have a better understanding of the decisions that are made along the story. ‘‘If stories
were depopulated, the plots would disappear because characters and plots are interrelated’’
(Meyer 66).
Many pieces of information about Emily’s personal life and personality are given as the
story is developed. For instance, ‘‘People in our town, remembering how old lady Wyatt, her
great-aunt, had gone completely crazy at last, believed that the Griersons held themselves a little
too high for what they really where’’ (Faulkner 42). This sentence gives the reader information
about Emily’s family, and eventually the reader can find a relation between this information and
Emily’s actions at the end of the story by concluding that Emily could have fallen into a state of
craziness since her great-aunt also did. Another example is the character of Homer Barron. He is
a man from the north that is courting Emily. People in Jefferson, the town where Emily is from,
know that Homer likes to gather with men in a more romantic way; however, he keeps courting
Emily. In the story, Emily was from a wealthy and a very respected family until her father died.
She only inherited the house she lived in but kept her status anyway. Along the story, people
from the town begin to believe that Homer and Emily are going to get married, but at the end it is
made clear that they were not. Thanks to the information that is provided about both characters,
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the reader can assume that since Homer is openly homosexual, there cannot be a romantic
interest on his part, but perhaps an economic or social one.
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Works Cited
Faulkner, William. ‘‘A Rose for Emily.’’ Meyer and Miller, pp. 40-46.
Meyer, Michael and D. Quentin Miller, editors. ‘‘Character.’’ The Compact Bedford
Introduction to Literature. 12th ed., Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2020.