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Young Goodman Brown, by Nathaniel Hawthorne

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There is nothing but black all around the forest. Only the stars shine bright as the dark trees and path calls forth the treacherous Indians and shadows of the night. Bushes close behind as mysterious sounds race underfoot. There is even a smidge of black in the good man’s heart, whose owner is walking through the sea of dark with an equally, if not more, serpent-like staff carrying dark companion. This respectable man is Young Goodman Brown, as portrayed in Nathaniel Hawthorne’s short story “Young Goodman Brown”. The forest is only a small part of the setting, as this also takes place in a village in Salem Massachusetts and surrounding area the year 1692. The mood is heavy with superstition, confusion, doubt, betrayal, and shallowness. …show more content…

“Faith kept me back a while.” The stranger, who travels with young Goodman, seems very similar and different to Goodman himself, as far as looks go. Yet, he is the one persuading Goodman to go the opposite way of Faith’s, reasoning for him to go farther when Goodman said he would not go on this path any farther. The “good” townspeople seem like the ideal community: Goody Cloyse teaching the children, the minister, and the duke bestowing blessings and all praying. Goodman has no doubt they are good, until he sees them at the meeting. In addition, Hawthorne’s characters are more than characters; they are symbols pertaining to life. Young Goodman Brown represents the young, wary traveler and the religious person testing what he believes. Faith and her pink ribbons symbolize pureness and innocence. The stranger with his serpent-like staff is the exact opposite of Faith, with him and the forest representing the darkness and the demon of evil itself. The townspeople have hidden hearts of rocks under the exterior. Since the people were Puritans during the Salem Witch Trials, this may have happened in real life, although dramatized in the story. The conflict that arises would fall under man vs. man, man vs. society, and man vs. self. Goodman displays all three by arguing with himself, the stranger, Faith, and the townspeople. In this

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