Originally Posted by
Antiquarian
While I liked the townspeople in many ways, I didn't feel sympathy for the town because they really didn't have to "deal" with Emily that much, she isolated herself, and when they did, they didn't seem to mind too terribly, but I liked the townspeople in not judging her so harshly (at times), in trying everything they could to help her. They tried to help her when her father died, they spread lime around her gardens and cellar door, they did all they could to help her. However, ultimately, it's the town who forces her hand, I think. They are the ones who judged her relationship with Homer far too harshly.
At first, they're happy for her when she's seen about town with Homer, and I liked them for that unselfish happiness, but when things seem to be turning a bit serious, they condemn her. They say she would never marry him. They said:
Of course a Grierson would not think of marrying a Northerner, a day laborer. But there were others, older people who said that even grief could not cause a real lady to forget noblesse oblige - without calling it noblesse oblige.
So if a Grierson would not marry a Northerner or a day laborer, has the town really moved on?
They said:
She carried her head high enough - even when we believed that she was fallen.
So these townspeople you all have so much sympathy for/with has judged poor Miss Emily, who's lost everything, to be an adulteress, "fallen." She was described as a "fallen monument" in the beginning of the story, Faulkner like to repeat everything. I know the "fallen monument" refers to her as symbolic of the "old South," but "fallen," refers to her as being an adulteress in the "enlightened" town's eyes.
They even send for her relatives from Alabama to put a stop to the relationship, meddling in affairs that are none of their business.
So, in the end, I see the townspeople as doing some good, kind things, but also begin far too judgmental, especially when they consider themselves so enlightened.
Emily's father, as well as the judgmental townspeople have to take some of the responsibility for the poisoning of Homer.