+ 1-888-787-5890  
   + 1-302-351-4405  
 
 
 
 

Essay/Term paper: The downfall of young goodman brown

Essay, term paper, research paper:  Position Papers

Free essays available online are good but they will not follow the guidelines of your particular writing assignment. If you need a custom term paper on Position Papers: The Downfall Of Young Goodman Brown, you can hire a professional writer here to write you a high quality authentic essay. While free essays can be traced by Turnitin (plagiarism detection program), our custom written essays will pass any plagiarism test. Our writing service will save you time and grade.

"Young Goodman Brown", by Nathaniel Hawthorne, is a story that is thick with allegory.

"Young Goodman Brown" is a moral story which is told through the perversion of a religious

leader. In "Young Goodman Brown", Goodman Brown is a Puritan minister who lets his

excessive pride in himself interfere with his relations with the community after he meets with the devil, and causes him to live the life of an exile in his own community.



"Young Goodman Brown" begins when Faith, Brown's wife, asks him not to go on an

"errand". Goodman Brown says to his "love and (my) Faith" that "this one night I must tarry

away from thee." When he says his "love" and his "Faith", he is talking to his wife, but he is also talking to his "faith" to God. He is venturing into the woods to meet with the Devil, and by doing so, he leaves his unquestionable faith in God with his wife. He resolves that he will "cling to her skirts and follow her to Heaven." This is an example of the excessive pride because he feels that he can sin and meet with the Devil because of this promise that he made to himself. There is a tremendous irony to this promise because when Goodman Brown comes back at dawn; he can no longer look at his wife with the same faith he had before.



When Goodman Brown finally meets with the Devil, he declares that the reason he was

late was because "Faith kept me back awhile." This statement has a double meaning because his

wife physically prevented him from being on time for his meeting with the devil, but his faith to God psychologically delayed his meeting with the devil.



The Devil had with him a staff that "bore the likeness of a great black snake". The staff

which looked like a snake is a reference to the snake in the story of Adam and Eve. The snake led Adam and Eve to their destruction by leading them to the Tree of Knowledge. The Adam and

Eve story is similar to Goodman Brown in that they are both seeking unfathomable amounts of

knowledge. Once Adam and Eve ate from the Tree of Knowledge they were expelled from their

paradise. The Devil's staff eventually leads Goodman Brown to the Devil's ceremony which

destroys Goodman Brown's faith in his fellow man, therefore expelling him from his utopia.



Goodman Brown almost immediately declares that he kept his meeting with the Devil and

no longer wishes to continue on his errand with the Devil. He says that he comes from a "race of honest men and good Christians" and that his father had never gone on this errand and nor will he. The Devil is quick to point out however that he was with his father and grandfather when they were flogging a woman or burning an Indian village, respectively. These acts are ironic in that they were bad deeds done in the name of good, and it shows that he does not come from "good Christians."



When Goodman Brown's first excuse not to carry on with the errand proves to be

unconvincing, he says he can't go because of his wife, "Faith". And because of her, he can not

carry out the errand any further. At this point the Devil agrees with him and tells him to turn back to prevent that "Faith should come to any harm" like the old woman in front of them on the path. Ironically, Goodman Brown's faith is harmed because the woman on the path is the woman who

"taught him his catechism in youth, and was still his moral and spiritual adviser." The Devil and the woman talk and afterward, Brown continues to walk on with the Devil in the disbelief of what he had just witnessed. Ironically, he blames the woman for consorting with the Devil but his own pride stops him from realizing that his faults are the same as the woman's.



Brown again decides that he will no longer to continue on his errand and rationalizes that

just because his teacher was not going to heaven, why should he "quit my dear Faith, and go after her". At this, the Devil tosses Goodman Brown his staff (which will lead him out of his Eden) and leaves him.

Goodman Brown begins to think to himself about his situation and his pride in himself

begins to build. He "applauds himself greatly, and thinking with how clear a conscience he should meet his minister...And what calm sleep would be his...in the arms of Faith!" This is ironic because at the end of the story, he can not even look Faith in the eye, let alone sleep in her arms. As Goodman Brown is feeling good about his strength in resisting the Devil, he hears the voices of the minister and Deacon Gookin. He overhears their conversation and hears them discuss a "goodly young woman to be taken in to communion" that evening at that night's meeting and fears that it may be his Faith.



When Goodman Brown hears this he becomes weak and falls to the ground. He "begins

to doubt whether there really was a Heaven above him" and this is a key point when Goodman

Brown's faith begins to wain. Goodman Brown in panic declares that "With Heaven above, and

Faith below, I will yet stand firm against the devil!" Again, Brown makes a promise to keep his

faith unto God. Then "a black mass of cloud" goes in between Brown and the sky as if to block

his prayer from heaven. Brown then hears what he believed to be voices that he has before in the community. Once Goodman Brown begins to doubt whether this is really what he had heard or

not, the sound comes to him again and this time it is followed by "one voice, of a young woman".

Goodman believes this is Faith and he yells out her name only to be mimicked by the echoes of the forest, as if his calls to Faith were falling on deaf ears. A pink ribbon flies through the air and Goodman grabs it. At this moment, he has lost all faith in the world and declares that there is "no good on earth." Young Goodman Brown in this scene is easily manipulated simply by the power of suggestion. The suggestion that the woman in question is his Faith, and because of this, he easily loses his faith.



Goodman Brown then loses all of his inhibitions and begins to laugh insanely. He takes

hold of the staff which causes him to seem to "fly along the forest-path". This image alludes to that of Adam and Eve being led out of the Garden of Eden as is Goodman Brown being led out of

his utopia by the Devil's snakelike staff. Hawthorne at this point remarks about "the instinct that guides mortal man to evil". This is a direct statement from the author that he believes that man's natural inclination is to lean to evil than good. Goodman Brown had at this point lost his faith in God, therefore there was nothing restraining his instincts from moving towards evil because he had been lead out from his utopian image of society.



At this point, Goodman Brown goes mad and challenges evil. He feels that he will be the

downfall of evil and that he is strong enough to overcome it all. This is another demonstration of Brown's excessive pride and arrogance. He believes that he is better than everyone else in that he alone can destroy evil.



Brown then comes upon the ceremony which is setup like a perverted Puritan temple. The

altar was a rock in the middle of the congregation and there were four trees surrounding the

congregation with their tops ablaze, like candles. A red light rose and fell over the congregation which cast a veil of evil over the congregation over the devil worshippers.



Brown starts to take notice of the faces that he sees in the service and he recognizes them

all, but he then realizes that he does not see Faith and "hope came into his heart". This is the first time that the word "hope" ever comes into the story and it is because this is the true turning point for Goodman Brown. If Faith was not there, as he had hoped, he would not have to live alone in his community of heathens, which he does not realize that he is already apart of. Another way that the hope could be looked at is that it is all one of "the Christian triptych". (Capps 25) The third part of the triptych which is never mentioned throughout the story is charity. If Brown had had "charity" it would have been the "antidote that would have allowed him to survive without despair the informed state in which he returned to Salem." (Camps 25)



The ceremony then begins with a a cry to "Bring forth the converts!" Surprisingly

Goodman Brown steps forward. "He had no power to retreat one step, nor to resist, even in

thought...". Goodman Brown at this point seems to be in a trance and he loses control of his

body as he is unconsciously entering this service of converts to the devil. The leader of the

service than addresses the crowd of converts in a disturbing manner. He informs them that all the members of the congregation are the righteous, honest, and incorruptible of the community. The sermon leader then informs the crowd of their leader's evil deeds such as attempted murder of the spouse and wife, adultery, and obvious blasphemy. After his sermon, the leader informs them to look upon each other and Goodman Brown finds himself face to face with Faith. The leader begins up again declaring that "Evil is the nature of mankind" and he welcomes the converts to "communion of your race". (The "communion of your race" statement reflects to the irony of Brown's earlier statement that he comes from "a race of honest men and good Christians.") The leader than dips his hand in the rock to draw a liquid from it and "to lay the mark of baptism upon their foreheads". Brown than snaps out from his trance and yells "Faith! Faith! Look up to Heaven and resist the wicked one!" At this, the ceremony ends and Brown finds himself alone. He does not know whether Faith, his wife, had kept her faith, but he finds himself alone which leads him to believe that he is also alone in his faith.



Throughout the story, Brown lacks emotion as a normal person would have had. The

closest Brown comes to showing an emotion is when "a hanging twig, that had been all on fire,

besprinkled his cheek with the coldest dew." The dew on his cheek represents a tear that Brown

is unable to produce because of his lack of emotion. Hawthorne shows that Brown has "no

compassion for the weaknesses he sees in others, no remorse for his own sin, and no sorrow for

his loss of faith." (Easterly 339) His lack of remorse and compassion "condemns him to an

anguished life that is spiritually and emotionally dissociated." (Easterly 341) This scene is an example of how Goodman Brown chose to follow his head rather than his heart. Had Brown

followed his heart, he may have still lived a good life. If he followed with his heart, he would have been able to sympathize with the community's weaknesses, but instead, he listened to his head and excommunicated himself from the community because he only thought of them as

heathens.



"Young Goodman Brown" ends with Brown returning to Salem at early dawn and looking

around like a "bewildered man." He cannot believe that he is in the same place that he just the

night before; because to him, Salem was no longer home. He felt like an outsider in a world of

Devil worshippers and because his "basic means of order, his religious system, is absent, the

society he was familiar with becomes nightmarish." (Shear 545) He comes back to the town

"projecting his guilt onto those around him." (Tritt 114) Brown expresses his discomfort with his new surroundings and his excessive pride when he takes a child away from a blessing given by

Goody Cloyse, his former Catechism teacher, as if he were taking the child "from the grasp of the fiend himself." His anger towards the community is exemplified when he sees Faith who is

overwhelmed with excitement to see him and he looks "sternly and sadly into her face, and passed

on without a greeting." Brown cannot even stand to look at his wife with whom he was at the

convert service with. He feels that even though he was at the Devil's service, he is still better than everyone else because of his excessive pride. Brown feels he can push his own faults on to others and look down at them rather than look at himself and resolve his own faults with himself.



Goodman Brown was devastated by the discovery that the potential for evil resides in

everybody. The rest of his life is destroyed because of his inability to face this truth and live with it. The story, which may have been a dream, and not a real life event, planted the seed of doubt in Brown's mind which consequently cut him off from his fellow man and leaves him alone and depressed. His life ends alone and miserable because he was never able to look at himself and realize that what he believed were everyone else's faults were his as well. His excessive pride in himself led to his isolation from the community. Brown was buried with "no hopeful verse upon his tombstone; for his dying hour was gloom."























Works Cited



Capps, Jack L. "Hawthorne's Young Goodman Brown", Explicator, Washington D.C.,

1982 Spring, 40:3, 25.



Easterly, Joan Elizabeth. "Lachrymal Imagery in Hawthorne's Young Goodman Brown",

Studies in Short Fiction, Newberry, S.C., 1991 Summer, 28:3, 339-43.



Hawthorne, Nathaniel. "Young Goodmam Brown", The Story and Its Writer, 4th ed. Ed.

Ann Charters. Boston: Bedford Books of St. Martin's Press, 1995, 595-604.



Shear, Walter. "Cultural Fate and Social Freedom in Three American Short Stories",

Studies in Short Fiction, Newberry, S.C., 1992 Fall, 29:4, 543-549.



Tritt, Michael. "Young Goodman Brown and the Psychology of Projection", Studies in

Short Fiction, Newberry, S.C., 1986 Winter, 23:1, 113-117. 

Other sample model essays:

The game of golf is one of the oldest of today"s modern sports. Its exact beginnings are not known; however, some historians trace golf back to the Stone Age while others claim it originated from the...
Position Papers / THE END
The Red Badge of Courage Literary Critique The Red Badge of Courage begins with the Youth (Henry) preparing to leave to war. He has fabulous ideas concocted in his mind about victory a...
College Essays / The Ereod
Essay on The F.B.I. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- To uphold the law through the investigation of violations of federal criminal law; to protect th...
Position Papers / The Fall Of Willy Loman
The Fall of Willy Loman Willy Loman was a man who gradually destroyed himself with false hopes and beliefs. Throughout his entire life Willy believed that he would die a rich and successful man. It...
Position Papers / The Fat Cow Complex
It"s mid-June. I graduated a few days earlier and here I am sitting nervously on a bench outside Lane Bryant, staring at the gate It"s my first job interview ever. I"m nervous as hell. I must have...
Position Papers / The First Seven Years
Growing and learning is a part of life that no one is exempt from. This fact influences everyone, whether it be a young child learning to share or an old man learning to let go. Feld, in The F...
Position Papers / The Fish
Brad M. Rader English 1100 Section 124 Dr. Gene Miller March 10, 2000 "The Fish" Poems to me are an expression of a person"s outlook on a particular scene or subject. By reading a poe...
Position Papers / The Forbidden Paw
The Forbidden Paw Once, a very long time ago there was a crazy family that decided to go on vacation to Manakesh, Morocco. "What a dump! Why would Princess Grace live in a place like th...
Position Papers / The Frying Pan
The metaphors that Conrad Hilberry stated in his poem "The Frying Pan", expressed some of the feelings that some women encounter throughout their life. In this poem I believe that Hilberry rela...
Julia McDonald ENGL 102H/Ellzey Poetry Interpretation "The Garden of Love" "The Garden of Love" is, quite obviously, a poem about life and the pursuit o...
Experience with Dream Essay - Reliable and great customer service. Quality of work - High quality of work.
, ,
Dream Essay - Very reliable and great customer service. Encourage other to try their service. Writer 91463 - Provided a well written Annotated Bibliography with great deal of detail per th
, ,
it is always perfect
, ,
The experience with Dream Essay is stress free. Service is excellent and forms various forms of communication all help with customer service. Dream Essay is customer oriented. Writer 17663
, ,
Only competent & proven writers
Original writing — no plagiarism
Our papers are never resold or reused, period
Satisfaction guarantee — free unlimited revisions
Client-friendly money back guarantee
Total confidentiality & privacy
Guaranteed deadlines
Live Chat & 24/7 customer support
All academic and professional subjects
All difficulty levels
12pt Times New Roman font, double spaced, 1 inch margins
The fastest turnaround in the industry
Fully documented research — free bibliography guaranteed
Fax (additional info): 866-332-0244
Fax (additional info): 866-308-7123
Live Chat Support
Need order related assistance?—Click here to submit a inquiry
© Dreamessays.com. All Rights Reserved.
Dreamessays.com is the property of MEDIATECH LTD