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A Character Analysis Of Hawthorne's Young Goodman
Brown
What created Goodman Brown? A man so tormented by what even he
considered to be a dream that it changed his life in a profound
negative way forever.
Goodman Brown was man plagued by his own conscious; he was
someone who believed himself to have committed grave sin by
meeting with the devil and participating in a witches meeting
in his dreams. This spoke of an era where people were overcome
with religious guilt and superstition. As a result of Brown's
dream he suspected everyone in the town of being cohorts with
the devil, in addition his superstition and questioning of his
own self overcame his ability to trust or believe in anyone
else. He died a bitter, unhappy, miserable man.
In order to fully understand the character of Young Goodman
Brown we must first understand the era he comes from. Although
Hawthorne does not state directly whether or not the plot of
this story takes place in Salem in the seventeenth century, his
references to other characters clearly imply it does. His
references to Martha Carrier, Martha Cory, and Sarah Cloyse,
all women hanged as witches in 1692; as well as his reference
to King William who ruled England from 1650-1702 tell of this
horrid time where people killed, tortured, burned, executed and
suspected that everyone from their sister to there neighbor
might be in contact with the devil. As a result of this
environment of suspicion and paranoia Goodman might have felt
as though his dream was in reality a lack of faith on his part.
He may have felt so guilty for experiencing this dream that he
thought he, as well as the people in his life were guilty of
coercing with the devil.
Goodman Brown might have been Hawthorne's expression of his own
struggles with his faith in humanity and himself. Hawthorne was
a guilt ridden person and I believe that he had many instances
when his faith was tested. Brown is Hawthorne to a lesser
extent. Goodman Brown starts out as a good, happy, decent man;
he seems very content. All of this changes when he decides
against the advice of his wife faith (the symbolism is obvious
here) that he should go out on a journey into the woods to meet
with the devil. I believe path in the woods to be his continued
decent into metaphorical as well as literal darkness. As he
continues down the woods he reaches the pinnacle of his journey
when he comes upon the witches meeting. Once Brown reaches this
point he loses his faith despite his last ditch effort to save
his wife. He never knows if he was able to save her. This doubt
is what destroyed him.
Brown's motivation for meeting with the devil is never made
absolutely clear and can only be speculated by the devil's
references to others that have come into his fold. He speaks of
the King, Goodman's father and grandfather, the deacon,
minister and mayor. The devil makes it appear that everyone
with any power, success or for that matter anyone that means
anything to Goodman is in fact allied with Satan. Although
Goodman resists the devils temptations at first; as more and
more people are brought to his attention as being followers of
the dark one, the idea becomes more acceptable. I believe
Brown's motivation to meet with the devil was power; he wanted
an advantage over others to achieve his goals. This may have
contributed to his last ditch effort to save faith when he
shouted "Look up to Heaven, and resist the Wicked One". When he
arrived at the witches meeting he discovered that everyone
already had the advantage of being on the wicked side and had
already sold there souls for money, power, or prestige. He was
able to see that nothing would put him ahead of anyone else by
following through with his original task. He had nothing to win
and everything to lose by making an alliance with the devil.
Unfortunately for Young Goodman Brown it was too late for his
soul to be saved. He reached the point of no return and not
only didn't he reap any benefit from his ordeal but lost every
bit of happiness he previously possessed.
Goodman Brown was a man destroyed by his own obsession. He
lived a miserable life as a result of the guilt he felt for
embarking on a dark journey in his dreams; which resulted in
his suspicion of everyone and a lack of trust for individuals
in his community, himself and humanity. The only way Goodman
Brown would have been able to save his faith would have been to
never embark on the dark path.
by John Schlismann - 27th July 2008
John Schlismann has an interest in American Literature. To read
Young Goodman Brown goto: http://www.online-literature.com/short.php/158
Article Source: http://www.creativewriter.me.uk
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