Everyone in the town just whispered and said “Poor Emily,” because her father had left her with the house, but no money at all. “She was sick for a long time. When we saw her again, her hair was cut short, making her look like a girl, with a vague resemblance of those angels in colored church windows- sort of tragic and serene,” (Faulkner 302). Miss Emily cut her hair, which the townspeople describe as it making her look younger, like her youth days when her father was still alive. When her father passed away, all of the ladies of the town called her and told her that they were sorry for her loss, and her response was that he was not gone. The people had to wait three days for her to come to realization that her father was gone, just so that they could take his body and bury him quickly. Miss Emily was living in the shadows of her overbearing father the entire time that he was alive, and once he was dead and gone, Miss Emily was beside herself. This is showing that Miss Emily is once again in denial and not wanting to accept reality and…