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The Darkness of Hawthorne’s Young Goodman Brown

Young Goodman Brown In short stories, I have learned that there is much more than what at first meets the eye. Almost everything in the story has meaning. All I have to do is try to find the hints and clues the writer drops and manage to put them all together. I have to concentrate more than I ever have so that I can interpret the authors meaning and what he or she might really be trying to convey in the writing.

In Young Goodman Brown by Nathaniel Hawthorne, I determined that through diverse symbolism, Hawthorne writes of a man who in his coming of age learns that there is a darkness in everyone and upon this coming of knowledge, he is forever changed. From the start, Hawthorne describes Goodman Brown as a good Puritan who is devoted to his wife ^? Faith,’ whose name he uses like a shield for his soul. At the beginning of his walk through the woods, Brown runs into the Devil who tries to convert him; this is shown by the Devil’s offering of the staff to Brown.

The Devil goes on to say that Brown’s family has had dealings with evil in the past; examples used are the Salem witch trials and the killing of Indian non-combatants. This may be Hawthornes way of dealing with guilt he might have felt over his own forbears’ actions during those times. Brown goes on to say that he could not bear the shame of betraying his faith while the Devil is naming people known and respected by Brown to try to show him that it wouldn’t really be that bad if Brown joined the witches’ coven.

When Goody Cloyse is encountered, Brown learns how she truly feels about him; also, Goody Cloyse freely takes up the Devil’s staff. Proud of himself for denying the Devil, while again using his wife’s name to strengthen his resolve, Brown discovers that his respected Minister, Deacon Gookin, and even the Indians are all servants of the Devil. When Brown learns that his wife has given into the temptation of the Devil, the Christian belief he is struggling to keep is shaken from him. “My Faith is gone! ” “There is no good on earth; and sin is but a name.

Come, devil! for to thee is this world given. ” This shows that the most important thing in Christianity, his faith, is lost. Throughout the night, Brown finds out more than he ever wanted to know about how his fellow Puritan townsmen have betrayed their faith by giving in to their darker desires, he even feels his father urging him onward to do the same. All that he learns in the night is too much for him, and it changes a devoted husband with bright hopes and a wife whom he loves to a tired, beaten, questioning and almost faithless man.

Hawthorne uses symbolism to write a story that is open and ambiguous to interpretation. For myself, I believe it is about Hawthorne himself who is growing up in a time when many Puritan children are leaving the Puritan faith. There are many times in the story when he is questioning his faith by listing the examples of religeous infractions by his peers. For all this, it is a wonder Hawthorn was not eaten by the despair and guilt he lets Goodman Brown feel.

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