A Rose For Emily
A Rose For Emily
A Rose For Emily
By:
William Faulkner
“A Rose for Emily” was originally published in the April
30, 1930, issue of Forum. It was his first short story
published in a major magazine. A slightly revised
version was published in two collections of his short
fiction, These 13 (1931) and Collected Stories (1950). It
has been published in dozens of anthologies as well.
“A Rose for Emily” is the story of an eccentric spinster,
Emily Grierson. An unnamed narrator details the
strange circumstances of Emily’s life and her odd
relationships with her father, her lover, and the town of
Jefferson, and the horrible secret she hides. The
story’s subtle complexities continue to inspire critics
while casual readers find it one of Faulkner’s most
accessible works. The popularity of the story is due in
no small part to its gruesome ending.
Faulkner often used short stories to “flesh out” the fictional
kingdom of Yoknapatawpha County, Mississippi, for his novels.
In fact, he revised some of his short fiction to be used as
chapters in those novels. “A Rose for Emily” takes place in
Jefferson, the county seat of Yoknapatawpha. Jefferson is a
critical setting in much of Faulkner’s fiction. The character of
Colonel Sartoris plays a role in the story; he is also an
important character in the history of Yoknapatawpha.
However, “A Rose for Emily” is a story that stands by itself.
Faulkner himself modestly referred to it as a “ghost story,” but
many critics recognize it as an extraordinarily versatile work.
As Frank A. Littler writes in Notes on Mississippi Writers, ‘‘A
Rose for Emily’’ has been ‘‘read variously as a Gothic horror
tale, a study in abnormal psychology, an allegory of the
relations between North and South, a meditation on the
nature of time, and a tragedy with Emily as a sort of tragic
CHARACTERS
Miss Emily Grierson
Miss Emily is a truly tragic figure, but one who we only see from
the outside. Granted, the townspeople who tell her story know
her better than we do, but not really by much. This is why Emily is
called "impervious." We can't quite penetrate her or completely
understand her. But, perhaps there is a little Emily in all of us. In
the spirit of finding the human being behind the mask, lets zero
in on a few aspects of Emily, the person.
Tobe