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The Use Of Allusions In Young Goodman Brown By Nathaniel Hawthorne

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In the short story “Young Goodman Brown” by Nathaniel Hawthorne, there is a certain uncertainty, deviousness, and a riddle of wrongdoing living within the citizens of Salem. Young Goodman Brown, a very naive person, is ruined when he realizes the hypocrisy of his religion as he witnesses the truth in the middle of Salem woods. His own people worshipping a being that is not God! Ironically, when Brown confronts his fellow townspeople, he is angered by their responses; they seem to have no recollection of what occurred in the woods. Thus leaving him in a state of insanity, where all Brown senses around him are lies. The natural impulse to keep secrets and lies can harm others. This is embodied in Young Goodman Brown, who goes from a typical puritan to an unkind, judgmental, depressed man.
His wife, Faith, was seen as pure; this was the case in Puritan New England because women were seen as a depiction of an unadulterated being untainted by the fiascos of the world. So unadulterated that he is conveyed she and every other women in Salem is more important than man. Goodman Brown thinks highly of her yet witnessing her being in the forest causes him to diminish away from religion, symbolizing his true separation from God.
Another literary element that Hawthorne utilizes is allusion through symbolism. This is depicted when the story invites a new character: an evil creature that bears a staff in the shape of a black snake. This showcases the author alluding to the story of Adam

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