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Symbolism in Young Goodman Brown
Title: Symbolism in Young Goodman Brown
Category: Literature / English
Details: Words: 1431 | Pages: 6.1 (approximately 235 words/page)
Symbolism in Young Goodman Brown
“The Symbolism of Young Goodman Brown”
Nathaniel Hawthorne is a nineteenth-century American writer of the Romantic Movement. Hawthorne was born is Salem, Massachusetts, and this is the place he used as the setting for some of his works: such as “The Scarlett Letter”, “the Blithedale Romance” and “Young Goodman Brown”. In writing, Hawthorne was known for his use of allegory and symbolism, which made his stories a joy for everyone to read. Hawthorne was said
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showed last 75 words of 1431 total
was a immature, good, loyal, trustworthy, and holy man. He lacked strength, courage, firmness, seriousness, and determination as Puritan should, but at a point in this story he became an adult and matured. The story ended with Goodman Brown becoming a stern, sad darkly meditative, distrustful, if not desperate man. Hawthorne used all the character in this story to prove that good people also contain evil aspects. This story has proven to be a success.
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