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Homer Barron's death is foreshadowed largely through Miss Emily's actions and the nonlinear fashion in which the story relays them. The gradual and disordered revealing of information makes it seem as if there is often a hidden intent behind Miss Emily's actions. One example is when Miss Emily goes to buy arsenic:
Miss Emily just stared at him, her head tilted back in order to look him eye for eye, until he looked away and went and got the arsenic and wrapped it up. The Negro delivery boy brought her the package; the druggist didn't come back. When she opened the package at home there was written on the box, under the skull and bones: "for rats."
The first strange instance is that Miss Emily refuses to disclose what the arsenic is for, even though the law requires one to do so. The skull and bones, a common symbol for poison, foreshadows Homer's death. And to view this quote in its context, Miss Emily buys arsenic right after readers learn that Homer is not interested in marrying Miss Emily. That Miss Emily's acquisition of poison is preceded by Homer's lack of marriage intent brews suspicion.
Another example of Homer's death being foreshadowed is when Miss Emily buys a toilet set in silver with the initials "H.B." and a nightshirt. Again, this takes place after Homer reveals that he is not a marrying man. Thus the reader might question why Miss Emily still tries to continue seeing Homer, and even goes so far as to have Homer spend the night, implied by Miss Emily's purchases. This nightshirt foreshadows Homer's entrapment (by death), for at the end of the story, his corpse wears the same nightshirt that she had bought for him.












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Common Core-aligned