Feminist Critique of A Rose for Emily
.... as a virtual "prisoner" of the men in her life, a condition that forces her to take matters into her own hands when her beau,
Homer Barron, rejects her. ....
(1459

6

)
The Nature of Love: Faulkner and Hemingway
.... When Miss Emily dies, the townsfolk discover that corpse of
Homer Barron in her upstairs bedroom. .... With
Homer Barron, she gave her heart away. ....
(1597

6

)
The Nature of Love in Literature
.... When Miss Emily dies, the townsfolk discover that corpse of
Homer Barron in her upstairs bedroom. .... With
Homer Barron, she gave her heart away. ....
(1597

6

)
A Rose for Emily
.... Pitied, respected, and gossiped about freely, the only delineation from her lifestyle was her one beau,
Homer Barron, a Yankee who had been hired to help in ....
(1193

5

)
A Rose for Emily
.... However, these days are long gone and when her father dies
Homer Barron is part of the construction crew paving the sidewalks. .... So, too, is
Homer Barron. ....
(794

3

)
A Rose for Emily
.... However, these days are long gone and when her father dies
Homer Barron is part of the construction crew paving the sidewalks. .... So, too, is
Homer Barron. ....
(791

3

)
Perennial Prisoner
.... p. 484). She used to socialize about the time and could often be seen in the company of a "Yankee," one
Homer Barron. Though the ....
(765

3

)
A Rose For Emily
.... When the peripheral narrator comments that in poverty, isolation, and moral disrepute because of the assumed affair with
Homer Barron she "carried her head ....
(2793

11

)
A Rose for Emily William Faulkner's short story
.... that she could have a happy life without a man, and she was unable to believe that she could have a happy life without one particular man,
Homer Barron. ....
(1288

5

)
A Rose for Emily
.... the smell represents decay of a life style, that of the Old South, but also the decay of something very real: Emily's murder of
Homer Barron, the working-class ....
(1612

6

)
Aristocratic Pretensions
.... indignity. They are disappointed when
Homer Barron disappears that there was not a "public blowing-off" (Faulkner 242). Despite ....
(965

4

)
Relation of the Town to Miss Emily
.... indignity. They are disappointed when
Homer Barron disappears that there was not a "public blowing-off" (Faulkner 242). Despite ....
(965

4

)
Faulkner & A Rose for Miss Emily
.... the town's first families, Emily for a brief time after her father's death appeared to have been on the brink of marrying a Yankee foreman named
Homer Barron. ....
(2480

10

)
Themes in A Rose for Emily
.... The discovery of the deceased remains of
Homer Barron, who improperly courted Miss Emily and, therefore, violated the code of the old south, demonstrates the ....
(710

3

)
William Faulkner
.... At the same time, her social position requires a certain sort of match to satisfy the town, and
Homer Barron does not fit the bill: "Of course a Grierson would ....
(1525

6

)
A Faded Rose
.... again. When
Homer Barron disappears and Miss Emily buys rat poison, the townsfolk are worried she will kill herself. However, she ....
(826

3

)
"A Rose for Emily"
.... 498). Miss Emily and the foreman,
Homer Barron, begin to spend time with one another. The town doesn't know what to make of this. ....
(12177

49

)
A Rose for Emily: Reasons and Motives That Led Emily to Murder ...
.... clues that the reader can choose to acknowledge or ignore, but nowhere in the story does Faulkner clearly state why Emily Grierson murdered
Homer Barron. ....
(1272

5

)
Rose for Miss Emily
.... who ever did right by her. Not like that
Homer Barron who jilted her and was never heard from again. No sir, it might be best for ....
(583

2

)
Attitudes Toward Women Reflected in 3 Stories
.... At the same time, her social position requires a certain sort of match to satisfy the town, and
Homer Barron does not fit the bill: "Of course a Grierson would ....
(1139

5

)