The Theme Of Good Vs. Evil In Nathaniel Hawthorne's Stories

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Puritanism plays a key part in Nathaniel Hawthorne’s stories. He was raised in Salem, Massachusetts where his grandfather was a judge in the Salem witch trials. Many of Hawthorne’s stories are set in the Puritan era, such as "Young Goodman Brown" and "The Birth-Mark". Both of these works lead the reader to question aspects of the stories and in return makes the reader question Puritanism. Hawthorne achieves this by themes of good versus evil within man, impossibility of Earthly Perfection and the sin of pride.
In "Young Goodman Brown", the theme of good versus evil within man is present in Goodman Brown himself. He has to make tough decisions when in the forest, to be good or to follow along with the evil ceremony. Though, he questions everything after he discovers who all was in attendance in the forest. Hawthorne uses this to demonstrate the hypocrisy he saw in the Puritan religion, the most dignified and respected members of the town are shown associating with the devil. Goodman Brown begs the question, “Wither, then, could these holy men be journeying, so deep into the heathen wilderness?” (Hawthorne 624). Since the Puritan society was based on integrity and …show more content…

Goodman Brown’s pride enabled him to give into the activities in the forest after seeing the deacon, his grandfather and Faith, his wife, in the forest on their way to the ceremony. Similarly, he husbands pride got in the way of saving his wife, he knew that his greatest successes were his biggest failures and yet believed that he could remove the birthmark from his wife’s face. Due to this idea of being able to control nature, he was successful in removing the birthmark though it cost his wife her life, because after all nature wins over science. Since her birthmark represented morality, the fact that he could not stand the birthmark, when he should have embraced the thing that made her extraordinary, means he did not see her as someone with

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