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Absence of Absolute Good or Absolute Evil in Hawthorne's Young Goodman Brown

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Absence of Absolute Good or Absolute Evil in Young Goodman Brown

"'Lo! There ye stand, my children,' said the figure, in a deep and solemn tone, almost sad, with its despairing awfulness, as if his once angelis nature could yet mourn for our miserable race. "Depending on one another's hearts, ye had still hoped, that virtue were not all a dream. Now ye are undeceived! Evil is the nature of mankind. Evil must be your only happiness. Welcome, again, my children, to the communion of your race!'"

The above quotation from Hawthorne's Young Goodman Brown is of central importance in analyzing the attitudes and ideas present throughout the story, though in a curious way. The quotation (and the story itself), on first reading, seem …show more content…

Hawthorne's sense of irony and sarcasm is well illustrated in an episode like goodman Brown's loss of his wife, Faith. Brown experiences several points in the forest where he wants to stop, yet he always continues, because he still has Faith. When a pink ribbon flutters down to him, however, he goes half-mad and continues on to the communion, now believing himself Faithless. Hawthorne's use of more easily interpreted incidents and symbols like these only reinforce the idea for me that this is a story about much more than easy, clear divisions of human belief and behavior. I think Hawthorne knowingly used symbols which are slightly amusing in their simplicity because he is commenting, again, on the journey itself. His irony says that this is anything but an easy journey that starts out at dusk, made by a man with a wife named Faith, who meets witches in the woods and witnesses the totally corrupt nature of all humanity and then dies a lonely, tormented death. It's the perfect Christian fairy tale nightmare, and Hawthorne seems to have used it for exactly this reason: the journey itself is never so easy. When Brown returns to his town and sees the entire community involved in perfectly hypocritical activities as though nothing out of the ordinary is happening, I get the sense that Hawthorne is yet again suggesting that

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