Through death and dissolution may create bizarre circumstances leading to the mental release of solidarity. Although Emily in “A Rose for Emily” and Mrs. Mallard in “The Story of an Hour” are oppressed by society, only Mrs. Mallard finds a sense of freedom and liberation in the death of her love one. Emily’s restrictions of intimate connections have stripped her sense of self confidence, worth and future hope. Her father’s authority enclosed her like a tea lid before the steam lets itself out to be noticed. We arrive at the scene, the death of her father. To understand her pain and loss of the man who was the protector and foundation of the Griersons forced a collapse in her chemical imbalance of social analytical behaviors. The captivity and seclusion strings components of bad hygiene, health and social unawareness of life. She cannot foresee a future with happiness or even a man to understand the meaning of her despondence. She is left with one man. Tobe is the hammer pounding the nail in Emily’s survival in nutritional stability, although she is disconcerted with. This enhanced conflict with her pro social aptitude in society. There was a change in Emily, a chance that she could redeem herself and take her place in a changing world with new generations and an abundance of higher social class aware of her statue through decades since the death of her father.
Strong, confident, a man who patrols the streets with a whip as if a Spartan would hold his sword before battle. Emily has found the necessary approval in him. The sense of companionship that was stripped in her earlier years, although it did not completely entombed her thoughts. Homer baron is what she has been waiting for to free Emily from a community that has judge every element of her life. The connection made between the two only inherited Homer to raise his social status leaving Emily second place to his same sex counterparts. She could not have been wrong in her decision...