Use Of Lachrymal Imagery In Hawthorne's Young Goodman Brown

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In Joan Easterly’s article, “Lachrymal imagery in Hawthorne's `Young Goodman Brown'” she argues, “In essence, Hawthorne here carefully delineates the image of a young man who has faced and failed a critical test of moral and spiritual maturity(439)”. With this thesis, she shows how different symbols throughout Nathaniel Hawthorne’s “Young Goodman Brown” represent how Young Goodman Brown has failed a life test. She uses the symbol of the cold dew on his face to show how he didn’t weep as he should have during this critical moral test. She tells of his lack of emotion and that his religion was not truly within him. Easterly states, “. This lachrymal image, so delicately wrought, is the key to interpreting the young Puritan's failure to achieve …show more content…

It was already clear that this story was meant to show the testing of one’s religion. I didn’t see what some of the symbols meant as Joan Easterly explains it. She tells of how in this type of situation that Young Goodman Brown should have should some human compassion and broke down if his faith was strong enough. After the test he seemed to have missed these concepts. Easterly states, “This lack of tears, the outward sign of an inward reality, posits the absence of the innate love and humility that would have made possible Brown's moral and spiritual progression (339)”. This tells that this story was meant to be a test of religion and morals. It is told that one this happens it creates a huge change within Young Goodman Brown. The reason he is changed forever is because this was a test to prove himself. With this test he was to show he was religiously strong and could handle the evils of the world. Easterly states,“ He shows no compassion for the sinfulness he sees in others (and which he shares), no tolerance for others' imperfections, and no respect for their attempts at faithful lives(344)”. These are the aspects that are important in the shift from adolescence to adulthood which he had

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