Hypocrisy In Hawthorne's Young Goodman Brown

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In Nathaniel Hawthorne`s fictional work Young Goodman Brown, he explores the idea of hypocrisy among the Puritans during the Salem Witch Trials in Salem, Massachusetts. Through symbolism, irony, and characterization he proves that the pressure to fit in makes evil stronger than good.
Hawthorne uses symbolism to try to get people to understand more clearly how much stronger evil is than good when people are pressured to fit in. When he talks about how Faith "let the wind play with her pink ribbons" while kissing Young Goodman Brown goodbye (Hawthorne 1), he wants everyone to look past the fact that the ribbons might symbolize purity to see that they really symbolize the mixture of "white and red" or purity and evil within her. Her purity represents her urge to resist evil, which is her temptation to do bad things. After enterimg the forest while he was on his "present evil purpose" Young Goodman Brown began to question if "the devil himself was at [his] very elbow" soon after saying this hesay …show more content…

This symbolizes his conscience catching up with him because not only his wife Faith but also his faith in God and his Puritan beliefs made him contemplate whether he should go into the forest to meet the devil and engage in evil activities.Soon

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