The womans hair, which lets you know that she laid next to his dead body.
Ned Flanders and his two kids Rod and Todd
A copy of Homer's masterpiece The Illiad and a dagger
Yes. In fact, it's quite obvious that Emily is Homer's killer. She had motive: Homer was about to jilt her and leave town. Opportunity: Homer was last seen alive entering her house, until he was seen dead in the house, on Emily's bed with a lock of her hair on the pillow beside the corpse. Means: She had purchased arsenic at the drugstore shortly before Homer was last seen going into Emily's house.
That the corpse of Homer Barron has been in a bedroom in Emily's house since his disappearance and that on the pillow beside him is iron-gray hair and an indention where someone was apparently laying/sleeping in the bed beside him..... (Emily)
Miss Emily sleeps with Homer Barron for at least several decades, as evidenced by the discovery of his remains in her bed and the strand of gray hair found on his pillow suggesting long-term companionship.
If you mean the fictitious Homer from Faulkner's short story, he died soon after he proposed from arsenic poison by Emily who could not bear to marry him because of his low social status, but could not bear to let him go either.
They found the set of toiletries Emily had purchased for Homer Barron, his body in bed, and her hair on the pillow next to him.
In William Faulkner's "A Rose for Emily," Homer Barron is found dead in Emily Grierson's bedroom, decades after disappearing. His body is discovered lying on a bed, decomposed, and indented in the pillow next to it, indicating that Emily had been sleeping next to his corpse.
The antagonist are the townspeople because they all come to her house after her death looking for answers to all her mysteriousness and also to find out what is in that creepy room which happens to be her sweetheart Homer Baron whom which she killed with the poison she bought from the store..the rose is a symbol for homer
Homer Barron, a character in A Rose for Emily, dies and Emily keeps his body in her house. When the townsfolk enter the house after Emily's death, they see his corpse on a bed with a pillow next to it that has a strand of Emily's hair on in, indicating that she often laid next to his dead body.
The name Homer means "security, pledge, hostage." Given his fate in the story, it is possible to extrapolate that Homer is "being held as a security or guaranty" against Emily's loneliness.
Homer Baron never wanted to marry Miss Emily. In the story, he stated that he wasn't the marrying kind and preferred to drink with the young men at the Elk's Club. Many readers believe he was a homosexual.