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Thursday, February 21, 2019

Homer Barron’s remains that lay on the bed

It was bulls eye Barrons remains that lay on the bed in one of the live of the old Grierson house, found there forty years after his disappearance. The good deal and events cited by the author of the short story A Rose for Emily shoot out to this inevitable conclusion.Only a person with an abnormal state of beware would suffer a dead man to lie unburied for years, mouldering veracious inside a room in her house. When some of the neighbours complained of the foul smell, fall behind Emily acted as if nothing was wrong the men who had surreptitiously entered her lawn to spread scatter over the ground saw her sitting inside one of the rooms. occult to them at that time, she was perhaps keeping vigil or visiting her raw siennas corpse.That she would lie down with him night after night manifest by the long strand of iron-gray hair found in the indentation in the pillow beside him bespeaks of her utter loss of sanity, which was not so visible at head start. That mislay Emily suffered from emotional instability a running of madness in her becomes apparent as the story unfolds.Cloistered in the antediluvian Grierson mansion, Miss Emily is seen as someone above the average citizen her supposed channel kept people at bay. She ignored tax notices sent after her father died either she did not comprehend, or she had naively believed the old narrative that the townspeople were indebted to her family. She is impervious and cold, seemingly devoid of any emotion, as if lost in a world only she knows about.We find the first strong evidence of her unnatural state of mind when her father dies she refuses for collar days to have him buried, telling the mourners he was not dead. We did not phrase she was crazy then, narrates the author. The people saw her grief as evidence of a despairing helplessness, feeling herself so alone, still unmarried, her father having driven out those young men who had earlier proposed to her.We are told that Miss Emily had some co nsanguineous in Alabama but years ago her father had travel out with them over the estate of old lady Wyatt, the crazy woman . . . Here is yet another hint that madness ran in the family.When she and Homer Barron are seen together, causing a scandal among the townsfolk, the Baptist minister is sent to spill the beans to her. The minister does not say what transpired during their interview but he refuses to go back (and talk to her) again.Perhaps the minister was taken aback by Miss Emilys haughty demeanor as that she displayed when she vanquished the town officials who had demanded from her payment of taxes. Or maybe the minister saw something frightful in Emilys eye that he refused to talk to her again.

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