The character Goodman Brown, from “Young Goodman Brown,” partakes in a journey into the forest during the late evening where he undertakes many obscure paths that transform his attitude with life completely. Goodman Brown starts off as an innocent man until he ventures deeper into the forest and meets with an elderly man that possibly represents the devil. The stranger began to corrupt Goodman Brown’s mind as they proceeded along the journey. For example, “Goodman Brown believes in the Christian nature of Goody Cloyse, the minister,…
Hawthorne’s “Young Goodman Brown” uses symbolism and allegory to show that people inevitably surrender to the darkness inside of them even if their initial intentions are pure. Hawthorne describes Goodman Brown as a religious man who is drawn towards sin and darkness soon after his marriage. Goodman Brown enters the forest that signifies sin, but resists temptations to join the devil until he finally loses his faith and gives in to evil. Symbolism and allegory are used in the story to help the reader learn about how Brown loses faith in his Puritan society and distrusts the innocence of society.…
In the village of Salem there is man, Goodman Brown, who is a Christian. He meets a man in the woods, who eerily seems to be expecting Goodman. When the two encounter a woman in the woods, the man is identified by her to be the Devil himself, and her a witch. He also hears the minister and deacon of his church going to the Devil’s ceremony, along with the witch. Goodman thinks that while everyone else is turning to the Devil, he must stay true to God. As the story progresses more, Goodman hears his wife Faith’s voice at the ceremony, which pushes him over the edge and he uses the Devil’s staff to go to the ceremony. Throughout this story, Hawthorne wraps pieces of Romanticism into the plot. There are elements of nature, solitude, and innocence. They help the overall theme of the story emerge because they build up the setting and path for Goodman’s loss of his innocence.…
Goodman Brown is a faithful Christian until he begins to go on a journey to find his spiritual path. We are lead to believe that he arranges a meeting with the devil, by the devil later stating that Goodman is late. His wife, Faith, also a metaphor for his relationship with God test him and keeps him back from his journey for a small time.…
Is Young Goodman Brown's encountering with the Devil merely a test of his own faith? Or perhaps, is he simply intrigued by the mystique of evil forces that lie outside the realm of what he considers acceptable behavior in his Puritan times? "With this excellent resolve for the future, Goodman Brown felt himself justified in making more haste on his present evil purpose" (634). Through his writing Nathaniel Hawthorne is able to develop a distinct set of doctrine that existed within the mind of Goodman Brown. Thus, the reader can assume that one trait of Puritan Society is a lack of tolerance for forgiveness. It is no wonder that Puritanism is known for a somber outlook on life,…
Young Goodman Brown: This story was confusing at first, but after the second read through I found the story of Goodman Brown to be a great revelation that people aren’t always who they seem to be. When Goodman Brown meets up with the older man, he is essentially meeting up with the devil. The devil then weaves Goodman Brown into what is described as a dream, although to me as well as Goodman Brown, it is possible that it was not a dream. In Goodman Brown’s “dream”, Goodman Brown is lead to a sort of “evil ceremony” where he discovers many surprising people attending such as the minister of the church, Deacon Gookin, and his own wife, Faith. Seeing these people who Goodman Brown thought to be pious, Goodman Brown awakens from his “dream” with a new vision of the world. After the devil’s “dream” Goodman Brown is convinced that everyone is evil and loses his trust in the people of Salem. It was when Faith, Goodman Brown’s wife, was revealed to be attending the ceremony did Goodman Brown really start to lose his trust. When Goodman Brown saw his wife, as well as the ribbons falling from her cap, Goodman Brown lost this idea of female purity. Again, at first the story of Goodman Brown was a little confusing, but the second time around the story represented the great illusion that all people are pure due to moral choice and the illusion of female purity.…
As children people seem to know nothing about the presence of evil on earth. The only “bad guys” we see or are aware of are on television or in comic books. Eventually everyone experiences certain events in their lives that change their whole perspective on life. We all become aware of evil on earth. This knowledge can either bring us down or we can brush it off and go on with our lives. In “Young Goodman Brown” a young man is confronted with life altering events that change his perspective of the world and the people of Salem village. These events, and the knowledge gained from them, create a miserable life for Brown. Hawthorne uses supernatural events, the uncertainty created by the dark forest setting, and encounters with trusted moral advisors to cause the rest of Brown’s life to become gloomy.…
When interpreting Nathaniel Hawthorne's short story, "Young Goodman Brown", one can decide Hawthorne's intentional ambiguity towards Goodman Brown's encounter with the devil in the forest. Throughout the story, textual evidence influences the reader to discover that the meeting with the Devil did actually occur in reality.…
The object and goal of this task are unknown even to Goodman. Spiritual journeys are often depicted as a glorious and celebrated event but are actually the conscience leading its’ vessel through a time of turmoil. As Goodman progresses into the forest, he meets the being that will help him draw aside the sable curtain of delusion and see his beloved neighbors for the wicked coven they have always been. When greeted by the old man, Goodman recognizes him to be an older version of himself. The old man claims to have know Goodman Brown’s father and grandfather. I believe this “old man” is actually Goodman Browns spiritual guide that will lead him to discover the evil that he has lived with his entire life. The forest represents clouded view of Goodman Brown while the clearing that he enters represents reality. The old man is clearly a depiction of not only the devil but of the evil that Goodman has locked away. This old man is the part of Goodman Brown that falls in line with the rest of the townsfolk. As the pair progress through the forest they meet Ms. Goody Cloyse, a woman that Goodman holds dear to his own heart. Goody taught him a series of questions and answers referred to as catechism. Goody identifies herself to the old man as a witch, as if to explain herself as one of his own. Realization begins to set in, was this catechism actually the doctrine of the witches coven? Upon…
Young Goodman Brown, is a gothic short story written in the setting of Puritan New England, about the struggle a young “Goodman” by the name of Brown and the fight to maintain his innocence’s as he embarks on a journey through the forest with an elder man who symbolizes to be the devil himself. Nathaniel…
Young Goodman Brown is a young man who fits his name. He is innocent and believes the community is as harmless as they appear. However his innocence has blinded him to the reality of the dark world. Brown’s family, his wife, and respected members of the community such as Goody Cloyse and Deacon Gookin, have all submitted to the devil. Brown gives in by going to the ceremony, but is permanently scarred and shaken by the experience. He no longer trusts anyone in the community or fully loves his wife again. The beliefs he thought that everyone had were corrupted when he discovered their alliance with the devil. Each of these people followed one another, disregarding their personal morals. This made all the characters seem spineless and unfaithful. This shows Hawthorne’s themes of not all things are as they seem, standing firm in your beliefs, doing what you know to be right and not following the crowd just because of a popular decision.…
Innocence, the word itself brings to mind a pure being untouched by the evils of the world. In Nathaniel Hawthorne’s short story, Young Goodman Brown, he tells the tale of a young man and his path to realizing that no one in his village is innocent. This comes as a shock to him, but his own innocence is lost when he can no longer view those around him as pure and perfect. Symbolism is used with objects and motifs to demonstrate the overarching themes of the story. According to Hawthorne, what does the use of the pink ribbon and dream say about the loss of innocence?…
While we can only infer that Goodman Brown had depicted appearance vs. reality on his own, we can tell he never full heartedly trusted anyone ever again. The walk in the woods symbolizes his walking away from his faith and into the arms of the devil. The meeting in the woods reveals to Brown that not everyone is who they say they are. The townspeople never showed signs of the meeting or their inner evil. Goodman Brown lived out the rest of his life in gloom and never trusted…
The story of Young Goodman Brown by Nathaniel Hawthorne is an allegory focused on the concept of the inherent evil nature of mankind and the the loss of a person 's faith. The character of Goodman Brown represents mankind confronted with temptation, as is illustrated when Brown enters the forest of sin and tries to leave several times but is constantly held back by the devil. Brown encounters his own evil among the evil of others. Throughout the story, it becomes more apparent that the focus is not on Goodman Brown, but on society as a whole. Brown discovers that the whole town is going to the witch meeting, a final indication that everybody is dealing with evil. Hawthorne suggests that all of us have a dark side; in that sense we are all in league with the devil and we have not fully conquered the evil within ourselves.…
“Young Goodman Brown” is a short story by the American writer Nathaniel Hawthorne. The story made its first appearance in the New England Magazine for April 1835 and was collected in Mosses from an Old Manse in 1846. The story is set in the Puritan New England, a common setting for Hawthorne's works, and like most of the stories in Mosses, “Young Goodman Brown” examines Hawthorne’s favorite themes: the loss of religious faith, presence of temptation, and social ills of Puritan communities. These themes, along with the story’s dark, surreal ending, make “Young Goodman Brown” one of the Hawthorne’s most popular short stories.…