Thursday, December 19, 2019

A Rose for Emily and The Jilting of Granny Weatherall...

The Jilting of Granny Weatherall, a short story written by Katherine Ann Porter in 1930, describes an eighty-year-old Ellen Weatherall, nicknamed â€Å"Granny†, during her last day alive. While the story takes place in her bedroom, most of the action takes place within her head. Nearing death, Granny Weatherall reminisces on important events in her life, especially her jilting that took place sixty years ago when her then fiancà ©, George, left her at the altar. Although she carried on with her life, remarrying, having four children, and living to an old age, she never let go of this memory; the loss of George continued to have an effect on her. At the end of the story, Granny asks God for a sign, and when she does not get on, she feels that God has jilted her as well. With that final feeling, she dies. A Rose for Emily, a short story written by William Faulkner in 1930, describes the life and death of Emily Grierson, a significant figure in representing traditional south and Southern values in her town. The story begins with her death, but the details of her life are exposed throughout flashbacks by a narrator who seems to be a part of the townspeople. Because of the death of her father, Emily Grierson becomes disoriented and unstable; she believes that her father is not dead and refuses to allow anyone to bury him, much to the townspeople’s dismay. Much like Granny Weatherall, Emily is jilted by Homer Barron, a northern contractor that she falls in love with. She poisons Homer

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