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Foreshadowing in William Faulkner's A Rose for Emily Essay

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Foreshadowing in William Faulkner's A Rose for Emily William Faulkner paints a tragic tale about the inevitability of change and the futility of attempting to stop it in "A Rose for Emily". This story is about a lonely upper-class woman struggling with life and traditions in the Old South. Besides effective uses of literary techniques, such as symbolism and a first plural-person narrative style, Faulkner succeeds in creating a suspenseful and mysterious story by the use of foreshadowing, which gives a powerful description about death and the tragic struggle of the main character, Miss Emily. In general the use of foreshadowing often relates to events in a story, and few are attempted to describe character. Faulkner has effectively …show more content…

The smell that upsets the community is the next foreshadowing of the death of Homer. The smell comes "a short time after her sweetheart...had deserted her"(509). The manner of Homer's death is implied in the conversation between Miss Emily and the pharmacist as she is buying arsenic, a poison used to kill rats, as well as the picture of "skull and bones", which is exactly what the town people find left of Homer (511). The use of foreshadowing to describe the changes in Emily physical and emotional life is subtler and relies heavily on symbolism. The descriptions of the decaying house symbolize Miss Emily's physical and emotional decay, and as well as her mental problems. It foretells of her downfall, "a fallen monument" (507). The house is full of dust and dark shadows, "It smelled of dust and disuse-a close, dank smell", and symbolizes the death-filled environment that Emily lives in (508). To describe Emily's life, Faulkner effectively uses foreshadowing in conjunction with structure in the chronology of events. He opens the story with her death, goes backward in time when she is old, goes backward again to the foreshadowed death of Homer, and then backward again to her romance with Homer and finally to her death. Her first description is dark; "black" was her color, a representation of death, depression and gloom. Her second mention is an "upright torso motionless" figure

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