Love Wanted Essay, Research Paper
Love Wanted
Miss Emily Grierson was somewhat of a recluse. She spent the last years of her lonely life at home all alone except for the Negro man that was her life-long servant. Her build was that of a small woman, but through the years of her grieving she had gained many pounds and she had become quite large. Miss Emily’s eyes were small and dark. Her hair was iron-gray in its color. Miss Emily Grierson’s traits were driven into her personality by the numerous events that transpired during her early years.
When Emily was younger she was quite well known and liked among many of the people. Her family lived in a tremendous mansion that was beyond beautiful. As she grew into a respectable young lady her wedding was eagerly awaited. Her father and the Colonel were the superior protectors of her as a she grew up. It seemed that no young man was fitting enough to marry the sweet Miss Emily Grierson. The deaths of her father and the Colonel led Miss Emily to a life of seclusion. She was rarely seen in the public’s eye. The mansion began to deteriorate over the years of neglect. Sometimes the only proof of life in the decrepit old house was the leaving and return of the Negro servant, Tobe.
At he age of thirty Miss Emily Grierson had still not wed. The townspeople were positive that she would never marry. A northern construction company sent a young man by the name of Homer Barron to act as the foreman over the finishing of the towns
These tragic events led to the sculpture of the reclusive and unfriendly behavior of Miss Emily. The abandonment that she felt from the deaths of her father and the Colonel led Miss Emily to be a murderer. This act was only known by the servant, Tobe and no other. Her physical appearance was also altered by her life events. She was once a petite, attractive young woman, but with age and heartache her body grew to obesity and was quite displeasing to look at. All Miss Emily ever wanted in life was to be loved and adored by a man. All of the men in her life left her before she was ready to say good-bye; or that is all except for Homer Barron.
WORK CITED
William Faulkner. “A Rose for Emily.” Literature Reading Reacting Writing. Ed. Laurie G. Kirszner, Stephen R. Mandell. Fort Worth: Harcourt Brace College Publishers, 1997. 80-87