The main characters we meet in the story under
analysis are Miss
Emily Grierson (a protagonist), Homer
Barron and the townspeople (antagonists).
Miss Emily
is characterized both directly and indirectly. She is “… a
small, fat woman in black…
Her skeleton was small and spare…
She
looked bloated, like a body long submerged in motionless water,
and of that pallid hue. Her eyes, lost in the fatty ridges of her face,
looked like two small pieces of coal pressed into a lump of dough as
they moved from one face to another while the visitors stated their errand” – the author uses similes and and epithets to insist
that she’s physically ill. Still, she can stand up for her opinion: she rejects
the demands to pay the taxes in a “cold and dry voice”. Miss Emily repeats the
phrase “I have no taxes in Jefferson” several times which reflects her
unwillingness to accept new rules of the society.
Miss Emily
is a conservative woman whose life becomes a tragedy due to the certain
circumstances. For the whole town Miss Emily has been “a tradition, a duty and
a care”. But though a lot of facts about her life are presented in the story by
the narrator, Miss Emily’s genuine face opens only after her death. That proves
the idea that every person is a mystery for the society and it’s impossible to
explore somebody’s sole.
It is also generally accepted that Miss Emily is a symbol
of the previous epoch of America as she has lived at the times of slavery; when
the democracy appears she is not able to accept new rules of the society,
sticking to the past. I think that Miss Emily’s unwillingness to keep pace with
the changes at the very end drives her mad. Miss Emily’s tragedy is a tragedy
of the whole generation of Americans. It’s also mentioned in the story that
Miss Emily is an artistic person as she teaches children to paint china and
probably she is the one who painted her father’s portraits. But “then the newer
generation became the backbone and the spirit of the town and the painting
pupils grew up and fell away and did not send their children to her with boxes
of color and tedious brushes and pictures cut from the ladies’ magazines. The
front door closed…”. That shows that there is no place for the old generation
when the new one comes. I also believe that the indifference of the townspeople
contributes to Miss Emily’s madness. The death of a father becomes a real
challenge for the women; she doesn’t want to accept his departure and that
leads to her becoming ill for a long time. It becomes obvious Miss Emily
doesn’t have any friends; nobody cares when she buys poison at the drugstore
and shows any support to her. The phrase “She will kill herself; and we said it
will be the best thing” shows the cruelty of the townspeople which comes from
the hidden hatred to Miss Emily as a representative of the previous epoch, and
also from hidden envy because of the woman’s aristocratic origin.
Can we consider Miss Emily to be insane? Probably yes, as she
kills the man she loves, rejects the death of her father and Colonel Sartoris
and captures herself in the house. But the initial purpose of her madness is
the society she lives in.
The
townspeople: Generally the citizens of Jefferson can be characterized as
hypocritical and insincere. At the very beginning of the story we observe that
“the whole town” comes to Miss Emily’s funeral but not because of a desire to
honour her but because of indecent
reasons:
the men comes “…through
a sort of respectful affection for a fallen monument, the women mostly out of
curiosity to see the inside of her house”. The townspeople reject Miss Emily during her life
and shows attention to her only when she refuses to pay the taxes. This is also
an example of the indifference of the new generation: they know Miss Emily
doesn’t have money to pay the taxes but they show any sort of compassion toward
the miserable woman. I think this is the main Faulkner’s forewarning: the
progress, technical development of the society and its speeded up rhythm
shouldn’t influence and change our moral values.
Homer
Barron: Homer
represents the rising working class and is the exact opposite to Miss Emily. He is very sociable as “pretty soon he knew everyone
in the town”, but generally the townspeople don’t like him because of he's a rough-talking, charismatic northerner and an
overseer in town working on a sidewalk-paving project. Still Miss Emily wishes to marry him in spite of all the
differences between them
as she wants to find love, a husband and a family. We can only predict whether they break their
relationship or not and why Miss Emily murders him. Maybe because of the fact
that Homer “was not a marrying man” or
because of the gossips which appear in the town. This secret Miss Emily takes
to her grave.
There
are also a few secondary characters in the story. Tobe is "an old man-servant – a combined gardener and
cook". He is a symbol of slavery which
still resists in America. Though slavery is considered to be overcome, the new
generation calls Tobe as “the Negro” which is quite racist. The townspeople
seem not to care much about Tobe, but actually he is the only person who knows
the mystery of Miss Emily’s life. Colonel Sartoris, a close friend of Miss Emily’s father, is
a symbol of corruption in traditional aristocracy and
class system in the American South as he illegally dispenses the woman from the taxes.
Miss Emily’s father is a
representative of the former generation. He has no name in the
story; I think that
is because there are thousands of such people as Emily’s father in America and
they are the stumbling block on the way to the democracy.
He can be considered as a
selfish person as he restricts his daughter in everything, but I think he’s
just a parent who tries to protect his child.





You've done a great job to present such character's analysis. It is very informative, descriptive and the strongest point - it reveals your attitude to the characters. Nice!
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