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Ambiguity And Symbolism In Hawthorne's Young Goodman Brown

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The Premise of the Short story by Nathaniel Hawthorne called “Young Goodman Brown” is a somewhat simple plot if the reader is just shifting through the words of the story. But this story like many others written by Hawthorne has a hidden message behind its simple plot. The plot is this: Brown leaves the comfort of his home and village for the outside world to sun an errand, and returns a completely different man than who he was at the start of the story. This might seem like a boring plot, but Hawthorne has been recognized throughout the community as a writer who is capable of blending two different techniques into his stories. For example, Young Goodman Brown is a blend of Ambiguity and Symbolism that both work with each other in a way that leaves the message form his story a somewhat unexpected twist. For this story the message is about understanding that there is a dark nature within everyone no matter how innocent they seem to be. In order to get such a message one must carefully read through and point out the major details that have been used by Hawthorne as a symbolical topic. Symbolism is the practice of representing concepts and objects with the use of other objects or people. In this story, Hawthorne gives a deeper meaning through other objects and people that are mentioned. Within Hawthorne’s story “Young Goodman Brown”, the symbols used in the story are as follows; the pink ribbons, Goodman Brown’s wife, Faith, the woods, and the unholy assembly.
The first symbol

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