Throughout Elizabeth Winthrop’s short story, “The Golden Darters,” are symbols of how Emily, the main character, is growing up. The most obvious symbols are Emily piercing her ears, her father’s table where he works on the flies, and the golden darters. A symbol of Emily growing up is the fact that she pierced her ears, even after her parents forbid it, telling her she had to wait until she was seventeen. This shows defiance toward her parents, but also shows her becoming more dependent and able to make decisions on her own. Emily’s father’s workstation, or table, where he made the flies symbolizes the world her father was in. It was in a secluded corner of the house, isolated from much contact with anyone but her father.
Her father was trying to keep Emily like the table in a way, wanting to isolate her from the world of “boys” and everything else that comes with growing up. Another symbol of Emily growing up were the golden darters, or streamers, which were the first fishing lures that Emily and her father made together. He described them as “a big flashy fly.” After Emily gets her ears pierced, she uses the golden darters to make herself look “flashier.” The purpose of the lures was to attract fish, but Emily was using them to attract members of the opposite sex. What was meant to be a typical fishing lure is now becoming a sexual lure. Twelve-year-old Emily is obviously trying to grow up, but her father is not ready for that yet. When she shows the new earrings to her father, he is not pleased with what he sees.
The Essay on Miss Emily Father Rose Barn
Comparing William Faulkner's Two Short Stories, A Rose For Emily And Barn Burning Symbolism If we compare William Faulkner s two short stories, A Rose for Emily and Barn Burning, he structures the plots of these two stories differently. However, both of the stories note the effect of a father s teaching, and in both the protagonists Miss Emily and Sarty make their own decisions about their lives. ...
He is not ready for his daughter to become a woman, yet there she is, standing in front of him, looking like one. It seems as though he is angry that she used the lures the way she did, but he really doesn’t know how else to express his feelings. When he says, “that is not the purpose for which the flies were intended,” he meant just that; the flies were not meant to be anything more than fishing lures. “The Golden Darters” is about a young girl whose parents are trying to hold her back from growing up. By defying her parents and getting her ears pierced and then using the fishing lures to get the attention of boys, she proves that she is not only trying to grow up, but also is growing up.