A Rose For Emily 5 Essay, Research Paper
Time and Setting in “A Rose for Emily”
In “A Rose for Emily,” Faulkner uses the element of time to enhance
details of the setting and vice versa. By avoiding the
chronological order of events of Miss Emily’s life, Faulkner first
gives the reader a finished puzzle, and then allows the reader to
examine this puzzle piece by piece, step by step. By doing so, he
enhances the plot and presents two different perspectives of time
held by the characters. The first perspective (the world of the
present) views time as a “mechanical progression” in which
the past is a “diminishing road.” The second perspective (the world
of tradition and the past) views the past as “a huge meadow which
no winter ever quite touches, divided from them now by the narrow
bottleneck of the most recent decade of years.” The first
perspective is that of Homer and the modern generation. The second
is that of the older members of the Board of Aldermen and of the
confederate soldiers. Emily holds the second view as well, except
that for her there is no bottleneck dividing her from the meadow of
the past.
Faulkner begins the story with Miss Emily’s funeral, where the men
see her as a “fallen monument” and the women are anxious to see the
inside of her house. He gives us a picture of a woman who is frail
because she has “fallen,” yet as important and symbolic as a
“monument.” The details of Miss Emily’s house closely relate to her
and symbolize what she stands for. It is set on “what had once been
the most select street.” The narrator (which is the town in this
case) describes the house as “stubborn and coquettish.” Cotton gins
and garages have long obliterated the neighborhood, but it is the
only house left. With a further look at Miss Emily’s life, we
realize the importance of the setting in which the story takes
place. The house in which she lives remains static and unchanged as
the town progresses. Inside the walls of her abode, Miss Emily
conquers time and progression.
In chapter one, Faulkner takes us back to the time when Miss Emily
refused to pay her taxes. She believes that just because Colonel
Sartoris remitted her taxes in 1894, that she is exempt from paying
them even years later. The town changes, it’s people change, yet
Miss Emily has put a halt on time. In her mind, the Colonel is
still alive even though he is not. When the deputation waits upon
her, we get a glimpse of her decaying house. “It smelled of dust
and disuse It was furnished in heavy, leather covered furniture the
leather was cracked .On a tarnished gilt easel before the fireplace
stood a crayon portrait of Miss Emily’s father.” The description of
Miss Emily’s house is very haunting. There is no life or motion in
this house. Everything appears to be decaying, just as Miss Emily
herself. The picture of her father is just another symbol of
immobility and no sense of time. When he died, Miss Emily refused
to acknowledge his death. She stopped time, at least in her
mind.
Miss Emily is “a small, fat woman in black, with a gold chain
descending to her waist and vanishing into her belt.” “Then they
could hear the invisible watch ticking at the end of the gold
chain.” In this case, the watch is a symbol of time; yet in this
house, time is invisible. Miss Emily has lost her understanding of
time. When these men try to convince her that a lot of time has
passed since her father’s death and that she must pay her taxes,
she repeats, “I have no taxes in Jefferson,” and vanquishes
them.
From this point, Faulkner makes a smooth transition to a period of
thirty years ago, when Miss Emily “vanquished their fathers about
the smell.” The plot continues in the backward direction,
demonstrating Miss Emily’s lack of understanding of time. A smell
develops in Miss Emily’s house, which is another sign of decay and
death. Miss Emily is oblivious to the smell, while it continues to
bother the neighbors. These town’s people are intimidated by Miss
Emily, and have to sprinkle lime juice on her lawn in secrecy. They
are afraid to confront her, just as the next generation is afraid
to confront her about the taxes.
Her strong presence is enough for
her to surpass the law.
Homer Barron, a symbol of progression and alteration, comes around
to pave the town’s sidewalks and construction modernizes the town.
He starts courting Miss Emily, and the reader thinks that perhaps
he can put an end to Miss Emily’s hallucination with time. Homer
Barron is a cheerful character and an outsider. “Whenever you heard
a lot of laughing anywhere about the square, Homer would be in the
center of the group.” However, he is a bachelor who does not want
to settle down, and the town’s people don’t approve of him marrying
Miss Emily because of his class. “Then some of the ladies began to
say that it was a disgrace to the town and a bad example to the
young people.” Once Homer Barron enters Miss Emily’s house and her
life, he is bound to her forever without escape. “So we were not
surprised when Homer Barron-the streets had been finished some time
since-was gone. She murders him and preserves his body like one
would preserve a dead rose. Once again, time stands in her house,
while the rest of the setting, the town, changes.
Years passed and the “newer generation became the backbone and the
spirit of the town.” The new generation makes Miss Emily feel even
more isolated. “When the town got free postal delivery, Miss Emily
alone refused to let them fasten numbers above her door and attach
a mailbox to it.” Miss Emily refuses to let any change affect her
life and her house. “Thus she passed from generation to
generation-dear, inescapable, impervious, tranquil, and
perverse.”
“And so she died. Fell ill in the house filled with dust and
shadows.” Miss Emily dies in this decaying, old, creepy, house
which is located in a bright and rising town. The final stage of
decay in her house is revealed to the reader. Not only is she dead,
but so is Homer Barron, of whom only a decaying corpse remains. “A
thin acrid pall as of the tomb seemed to lie everywhere upon this
room decked and furnished as for a bridal.” The details of the
setting throughout the story foreshadow this dramatic conclusion.
The decay of the house, the dust and the cracks, Miss Emily’s
refusal for change all lead up to her death and that of Homer
Barron. As soon as an outside force, Homer Barron, enters this
creepy house, he disappears in time. “He had become inextricable
from the bed in which he lay; and upon him and upon the pillow
beside him lay that even coating of the patient and biding
dust.”
The scrambling of time throughout the story is a great
demonstration of the scrambling of time in Miss Emily’s mind and in
her house. As the town changes and progresses, grows and
modernizes, Miss Emily’s “stubborn and coquettish” house remains
the same. Perhaps if the story of Miss Emily had been set in a
different place, her life would have turned out differently. With
all the pressures from her father and the town’s people, she became
a very closed up and rather frightening person. There were too many
expectations of women in those days and Faulkner demonstrates the
consequences of such a life through Miss Emily. By setting the
story in an upscale, post Civil War town, he uses both the details
of the setting and time to show what happens women such as Miss
Emily, the “tragic monument.”
Miss Emily’s world was always in the past. When she is threatened
with desertion and disgrace, she not only takes refuge in that
world but also takes Homer with her in the only manner
possible–death. As a final conclusion of Miss Emily’s life and the
story, her position in regard to the specific problem of time is
suggested in the scene where the old soldiers appear at her
funeral. “The very old me-some in their brushed Confederate
uniforms-on the porch and the lawn, talking of Miss Emily as is she
had been a contemporary of their, believing that they had danced
with her and courted her perhaps, confusing time with its
mathematical progression.” These men have lost their sense of time
as well as Miss Emily. The hallucinate; they imagine things which
never occurred; there is no sense of time in their minds. Faulkner
presents a very horrifying picture in this story, and he does this
by playing with the chronology, using symbols and foreshadowing and
presenting a detailed setting.
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