Saturday, 13 November 2010

How does Hawthorne illustrate hypocrisy in "Young Goodman Brown" of the Puritans? Nathaniel Hawthorne's "Young Goodman Brown"

, the
contrast between what is expected and what actually happens or is said, appears in its different
forms throughout Hawthorne's story, "."  In fact, even the title of this story is
ironic, representing from the beginning the hypocrisy often found in the Puritan. Here are some
examples:

  • After telling Faith that he will just go out this one
    night, "With this excellent resolve for the future, Goodman Brown feels himself justified
    in making more haste on his present evil purpose."  In his Puritan sanctimony, Brown thinks
    nothing will happen to him when he attends the black mass in the forest.

  • When the old man calls to him, Brown explains that "Faith kept me back a
    while."  At the end of the story, Brown, who has admitted to abandoning his faith, sees all
    others as faithless.
  • Goodman Brown tells his...

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