THE FALL OF A GOOD-MAN: HAWTHORNE’S REPRESENTATION OF THE TEMPTATION AND FALL OF MAN IN “YOUNG GOODMAN BROWN”



Brenda Saldanha Melo SILVA
Mestranda em Liberal Studies
University of North Carolina at Greensboro (UNCG)
Graduada em Letras-Inglês
Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais (UFMG)


ABSTRACT: It all started with a fruit, a forbidden one, the fruit of “the tree of the knowledge of good and evil” (Genesis 2:16), a power God did not want man to obtain. Then came the serpent, a conveyer of all that was unknown to man, which with its cunning and smooth talk, and full of reasonable arguments, convinced Eve to commit that which came to be the original sin. And doomed was the rest of Eve’s and Adam’s existence, for now they were no longer innocent. For now they had such knowledge. They knew good and they knew evil, and their world now could no longer be Eden, no longer have perfection. This article aims at analyzing Nathaniel Hawthorne’s “Young Goodman Brown”, which brings a story that neither talks about the Garden of Eden, nor about Adam and Eve, but it can still be said to portray a much more modern version of this chapter of Genesis. Filled with very symbolic elements and words, it shows the path of one man, Goodman Brown, from innocence to knowledge, from seeing good in all to seeing all evil, thus, just as it happened to Adam and Eve, bringing his own fall.

KEYWORDS: Nathaniel Hawthorne. “Young Goodman Brown”. Goodman Brown.


RESUMO: Tudo começou com uma fruta, um fruto proibido, fruto da “árvore do conhecimento do bem e do mal” (Gênesis 2:16), um poder que Deus não queria que o homem possuíse. Então veio a serpente, detentora de tudo o que era desconhecido para o homem, que com o seu discurso astuto e suave, e cheio de argumentos consideráveis, convenceu Eva a cometer o que veio a ser o pecado original. E o resto da existência de Adão e Eva foi condenado, pois agora eles já não eram inocentes e adquiriram tal conhecimento. Adão e Eva agora eram capazes de distinguir o bem e o mal, e seu mundo, a partir daquele momento, já não podia ser o Eden, pois eles já não eram detentores da perfeição. Este artigo tem por objetivo analisar o conto “Young Goodman Brown”, de Nathaniel Hawthorne, que retrata uma história que nem fala sobre o Jardim do Éden, nem sobre Adão e Eva, mas pode-se dizer que representa uma versão muito mais moderna deste capítulo do Gênesis. Repleta de elemento e palavras simbólicas, a história mostra o caminho de um homem, Goodman Brown, da inocência ao conhecimento, ao deixar de ver o bem em tudo para ver todo o mal, da mesma forma que aconteceu com Adão e Eva; acarrentando a sua própria queda.

PALAVRAS-CHAVE: Nathaniel Hawthorne. “Young Goodman Brown”. Goodman Brown.


“Of Man’s first disobedience and the fruit
Of that forbidden tree whose mortal taste
Brought death into the world, and all our woe,
With loss of Eden, till one greater Man
Restore us, and regain the blissful seat,
(…)”
(John Milton, Paradise Lost, Book One)


It all started with a fruit, a forbidden one, the fruit of “the tree of the knowledge of good and evil” (Genesis 2:16), a power God did not want man to obtain. Then came the serpent, a conveyer of all that was unknown to man, which with its cunning and smooth talk, and full of reasonable arguments, convinced Eve to commit that which came to be the original sin. And doomed was the rest of Eve’s and Adam’s existence, for now they were no longer innocent. For now they had such knowledge. They knew good and they knew evil, and their world now could no longer be Eden, no longer have perfection.
Nathaniel Hawthorne’s “Young Goodman Brown”, brings a story which neither talks about the Garden of Eden, nor about Adam and Eve, but it can still be said to portray a much more modern version of this chapter of Genesis. Filled with very symbolic elements and words, it shows the path of one man, Goodman Brown, from innocence to knowledge, from seeing good in all to seeing all evil, thus, just as it happened to Adam and Eve, bringing his own fall.
Goodman Brown was a man of virtue, tradition, and scruples. His own name is symbolic of his personality – a good man. He believed the society he lived in - an extremely religious society, and centered on religious virtues. He not only respected those around them, but had great regard for their positions and reputations. He also believed in the goodness of his own father and grandfather, all serving as the pillars for his beliefs. “My father never went into the woods on such errands, nor his father before him. We have been a race of honest man and good Christians, since the days of the martyrs.” (Hawthorne p. 405). So many were his beliefs and virtues that he happened to marry a woman named Faith, “a blessed angel on earth” (Hawthorne p.404), who, always wearing pink ribbons, shows herself as a symbol of purity and innocence, who Goodman Brown intends to protect from all evil, since he leaves her at home when going for his errand.
In Genesis Eva, the one who had contact with the serpent, and who first ate the forbidden fruit, did so lead by her own innocence and lack of judgment. Had her had the knowledge to perceive any kind of evil, she would have been able to realize what was behind the serpent’s lies. “(…) You will not surely die. For God knows that in the day you eat it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil.” (Genesis 3:4-6) And because of both hers and Adams innocence, since he never questioned Eve regarding her disregard to God’s command, both are punished for disobeying God’s command, and having had their eyes opened to all evil, no longer can live in Eden.
It can be argued that Goodman Brown, unlike Adam and Eve, knew exactly what he was going in the forest for. He had absolute knowledge of who he was going to meet, why they would go in such evil errand, and the consequence of him participating in the ritual, and thus can be considered to be much more accountable for the consequences that followed. Even though he had second thoughts at all times as he walked through the woods, he failed to resist and to stick to his principles, still proceeding and consequently causing his own misery.
“Now the serpent was more cunning than any beast of the field which the Lord God had made” (Genesis 3:1). The serpent was the one who caused Adam and Eve’s fall, therefore the conveyer of evil. The same, therefore, can be argued to have been done to Goodman Brown, but not through the very symbolically portrayed staff, described by Hawthorne as one “which bore the likeness of a black snake, so curiously wrought, that it might almost be seen to twist and wriggle itself like a living serpent” (p. 404), but by the man, whose name is never mentioned, who carried such staff. An elder man, with an “indescribable air of one who knew the world” (Hawthorne p. 404), apparently known to Goodman Brown, and apparently, as the man mentions, well known to both Goodman Brown’s father and grandfather.
Unlike in Genesis, the devil in Hawthorne’s story is a mysterious man, with powers that prove him to be more than human. He knows everyone in town, their truths and lies, their pasts and presents, and the wrongdoings of all those who are living and who have passed, arguing having participated and helped them in their wrongdoings. All these facts are presented by the man to Goodman Brown as a means to convince him to participate in the ritual, which would grant him the knowledge of good and evil. And just like the serpent convinced Eve to disobey God, so did the man convince Goodman Brown to disobey his own instincts and come to the ritual. His arguments, much more powerful than those of the serpent to Eve, managed to lead Goodman Brown to believe there was no hope in believing in good and virtues, once all those people he grew up to admire, were as evil as the man who now spoke to him, and the only way was to be like them, to be able to see the evil in all man, perhaps to be able to truly discern those who were genuinely good.
Faith, his wife, is used in the story very symbolically as the one thing that still kept Goodman Brown from going to the ritual, “Faith kept me back a while (…).” (Hawthorne p. 404), but even she is not able to keep him from going. That shows the reader that once again the devil was stronger than a man’s faith. Adam, never discussed the fact that Eve had disobeyed God, and showing no faith or belief in such a rule, does the very same. “she took its fruit and ate. She also gave to her husband with her, and he ate. (Genesis 3:6). The serpent was smart enough to find exactly what to do and say to get them to do what it wanted, and so did the man in Hawthorne’s story. He used every argument, every person and every element he could find that he knew would shake Goodman Brown’s beliefs that were holding him back, until he finally touched the biggest one – his faith:

“There was one voice, of a young woman, uttering lamentations, (…). And all the unseen multitude, both saints and sinners, seemed to encourage her onward. ‘Faith!’ Shouted Goodman Brown (…)

The young man seized it and beheld a pink ribbon. ‘My faith is gone!’ cried he (…) “There is no good on earth, and sin is but a name. Come, devil! For to thee is this world given.” (p. 408)

There are also two other aspects in Hawthorne’s story worth comparing to Genesis. One is the setting, central to both stories, and the other is why the knowledge of good and evil is such a dooming one. Both the creation and Goodman Browns story bring the middle of a forest (in Genesis, a garden, though), as the place that guarded the knowledge of good and evil. “We may eat the fruit of the trees of the garden, but the fruit of the tree which is in the midst of the garden, God has said, ‘You shall not eat it, nor shall you touch it, lest you die” (Genesis 3:2) It is interesting, thus, to wonder if Hawthorne wrote his story, with the ceremony happening in the middle of the forest with the intention of resembling such place to the middle of the Garden of Eden, of if his interest was to explore the advantages of such a setting. The middle of a forest then would stand as a place that is hidden from man most of the time, inhabited only by wild creatures, possibly as a means to guarding something that is not, primarily, supposed to be attained, or discovered. In that sense, it would be necessary that men were guided by something or someone whose intention would be to make them forget their beliefs, lose their faith and acquire such knowledge, since they would not do otherwise without such guidance. And interestingly, such is done in both, “Young Goodman Brown” and in Genesis, by a disguised figure, which turns out to be the devil.
Finally we are forced to discuss and wonder about the danger of having the knowledge of good and evil, since it has such a central role in both stories. It could perhaps be that, like the saying “What you don’t know, won’t hurt you”, having the knowledge of evil can only cause harm to people. God did not want Adam and Eve to eat from the fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and evil because he had created them innocent creatures and wanted them to remain so. Once they knew evil, and knew shame, they were immediately affected by such knowledge, immediately changing their behavior. “…and they knew that they were naked, and they sewed fig leaves together and made themselves coverings.” (Genesis 3:7). In the same manner, Goodman Brown became affected by his knowledge. He became suspicious, bewildered, “a stern, a sad, a darkly meditative, a distrustful, if not a desperate man (…)” (Hawthorne p. 411). All the evil he was now able to see hurt him too deeply, and he was not able to have such knowledge and still be the same person. 
Once one is able to put these two stories side by side, their similarities become obvious. The fall of Goodman Brown can be said to have been caused by the same kind of knowledge acquired by Adam and Eve – the knowledge of good and evil. In both stories, the devil succeeds in corrupting innocent people, with facts and lies about those known to them, making them feel the evil way is the only/ right way. Hawthorne was very insightful as he wrote the story, with lots of symbolic features, some evident and some more subtle to bring to the reader a view of a much more modern story about sin, and the importance of maintaining our beliefs no matter what. Goodman Brown let himself be convinced by the devil, and losing all his faith, let evil and wrongdoing be his only reality from then on. Although it is arguable that he may have had no other choice than to become a disbeliever, it was still his free will that led him to the ritual, and that led him to distrust everyone at all times afterwards. Perhaps Hawthorne meant to tell the reader that unlike Adam and Eve, who were punished by God, we still have the free will to make our own decisions, and therefore to still seek the good among all evil in society.

Bibliography
Hawthorne, Nathaniel. “Young Goodman Brown”. Literature. An Introduction to Reading and Writing. Ed. Roberts, Edgar V., and Jacobs, Henry E. Upper Saddle River: New Jersey: 2004. 403-411
Milton, John. Paradise Lost. Chelsea House Publishers. New York, 1987.
The Nelson Study Bible. Radmacher, Earl D. Thomas Nelson Publishers: Tennessee, 1997.