Young Goodman Brown

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Gothic Themes, Settings, and Narrative Techniques in "The Black Cat" and "Young Goodman Brown." Edgar Allan Poe's Black Cat and Nathaniel Hawthorne's "Young Goodman Brown" are two similar literary works in the sense that they are both gothic. They both delve into themes like guilt, sin, and the outcome of human beings' actions. In Hawthorne's piece, Brown leaves his wife's faith and ventures into a dark forest, discovering what makes him lose faith in humans. In Poe's piece, the narrator loses his human nature and butchers both his cats. He also kills his wife and buries her with the cat in the wall. However, he later sets himself up by hinting to the police about the corpse in the wall. The authors use themes of guilt and sin, a gothic style, and unique narrating techniques in these works to portray the …show more content…

The setting in the "Black Cat" is the house of the narrator, where most scenes take place in the darkness—symbolizing his madness and moral corruption. "One night, I came home quite late from the inn, where I now spent more and more time drinking. Walking with uncertain steps, I made my way with effort into the house.I tied a strong rope around the cat's neck and took it down into the cellar under the house. Poe Pg. - "The 'Poe'" 35. The syllable of the syllable. Similarly, Hawthorne's setting is the dark forest that symbolizes the path into Brown's soul. "He had taken a dreary road, darkened by all the gloomiest trees of the forest, which barely stood aside to let the narrow path creep through, and closed immediately behind" (Hawthorne). Brown chooses to get into the forest to meet the devil, a journey that reveals to the reader his true personality. "I have to see in the setting a continuous revealer of the personality of Brown." ( Ezghoul and Zuraikat pg. 1). The adage of the adage. The setting emphasizes the beliefs that influenced the

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