The Symbolism Of Names In Hawthorne's Young Goodman Brown

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Hawthorne’s “Young Goodman Brown” tells a tale of when man, who is supposedly good in nature, faces temptation and evil head on. The story, much like the tale of Adam & Eve, is an allegory for the evil and selfishness of mankind. Young Goodman Brown's fight with his inner temptations and his outward struggle with the devil himself represents mankind's lost encounter within the battle of good and evil. Though it is not clear whether the events in the forest are real or not, the duplicity of the characters and surrounding objects suggest Hawthorne's true purpose is to expose the evil in all mankind, even in faith or a good man. Hawthorne goes as far to make Faith a literal person and a metaphorical belief, as well as making Goodman’s journey …show more content…

The names represent what the character is suppose to be, or more specifically how the character is portrayed at the beginning of the short story. The interpretations of the names emphasize the meaning Hawthorne intended to portray, as the naming is truly ironic for the characters are anything but their names in the end. This duplicity of names is best represented by the two lovers of the story, Goodman and Faith Brown. Young Goodman Brown is the most self explanatory name that Hawthorne weaves within this short story, with the last name Brown being the equivalent of having the modern last name of ‘Smith’. Brown is any and every young man who starts off his life with pure and good intentions. He is a young good man literally, which is illustrated best by Goody Clyose’s comment of “a nice young man to be taken into communion” (Hawthorne, 4). He is an average man who has just started his life in the heart of the good-olde puritan community. His youth is demonstrated not just through his new marriage, as in those times it was typical to marry young, but as well through his naïveté for “Brown wrongly assumes that his is an isolated, one-time distraction to be easily rectified by …show more content…

In doing so Goodman strays farther away from faith, literally and metaphorically, as he gets deeper in the forest his faith is questioned more and more. This journey is not by any means a normal one, yet it represents mans descent from good. As previously explained Goodman’s name is a symbol for all young men, thus his journey can be understood as one that all men go through. The setting is symbolic in itself as ““to walk by himself [Goodman Brown] in the primitive New England woods, the Devil's territory, . . . either to dream or actually to experience the discovery that evil exists in every human heart” (citation). Between Goodman representing an average man and the forest representing the devil’s territory, the story can be interpreted as man’s inevitable journey into evil. As well since the readers know that Hawthorne enjoys the duplicity of literal and metaphorical interpretations within “Young Goodman Brown”, nature can be seen as human nature where the evil that lies in the forest as well lies within every man and woman. This is best seen by how the “protagonist [is placed] in a haunted forest representing the hero’s troubled state of mind” Citation, wherein the character is confused to the his and other’s intentions and whether

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