Young Goodman Brown And Rappacini's Daughter
In Puritan Massachusetts the key word was suspicion. In order to be accepted, by the
community, you had to be a member of
the "elect," destined for a spot in the eternity of heaven. In order to be member of this
elite group of "selected" individuals
you had to be free of sin and evil. It goes without saying, that you could never be
caught conjuring the devil, as is illustrated
by the horrors of the infamous Salem witch trials. In Young Goodman Brown, and
Rappacini's Daughter Nathaniel
Hawthorne portrays two different ways of soliciting or being solicited by the devil. The
final scenes in both of these stories
although similar in nature, are actually conflicting in essence, and show the two adverse
ways in which people and evil can
become one.
In Young Goodman Brown, the protagonist, Goodman Brown goes off on a typical search for
the devil. The devil is
associated with darkness and terror, a creature only to be sought after while enveloped
in the darkness of the night. As
Goodman Brown himself replies to Faith's longing for him to wait until morning to embark
on his journey, "My journey needst
be done twixt now and sunrise" (611). Goodman Brown knows exactly what he is going to
look for, he is searching for evil. He
goes to the forest to do his deed and "he had taken a dreary road darkened by all the
gloomiest trees of the forest" to get
there(611). Goodman Brown is willingly seeking the devil, and Hawthorne is throwing in
all the stereotypes. This entire
search for the devil is portrayed as being very ugly. What then is pretty? In Young
Goodman Brown beauty equals inherent
goodness, or Faith. Young Goodman Brown separates from this righteousness, for evil. From
the beginning, he was leaving,
at least for the time being, Faith behind. "And Faith, as the wife was aptly named,
thrust her own pretty head into the
street, letting the wind play with the soft ribbons of her cap" (610). The beauty of
faith and her pink ribbons are left
behind, his intentions are obvious.
In Rappacini's Daughter Giovanni does none of this. He never went out searching for the
devil, all he wanted to do was
study in Padua. The devil was not obvious to Giovanni, it went after him, and he did not
even know it. Giovanni's first
glimpse of the "devil's lair" is considerably different of that of Goodman Brown. Instead
of a dreary, dark forest, Giovanni
saw Eden. "Water which continued to gush and sparkle into the sunbeams as cheerfully as
ever. A little gurgling sound
ascended to the young man's window, and made him feel as if the fountain were an immortal
spirit that sung its song
unceasingly and without heeding the vicissitudes around it." (628). Instead of his first
human encounter being with a
devilish man with slithering snake on his staff, Giovanni met the beautiful Beatrice
(614). Beatrice was as beautiful as the
devil was ugly. Giovanni glanced into the garden and "Soon there emerged from under a
sculptured portal the figure of a
young girl, arrayed with as much richness of taste as the most splendid of flowers,
beautiful as the day, and with a bloom so
deep and vivid that one shade more would have been too much. She looked redundant with
life, health, and energy" (629).
In Rappacini's Daughter instead of beauty equaling faith, it equals the Devil, or the
evil that Beatrice really represented.
This is not as clear cut as Young Goodman Brown. There in order to "be with the devil"
you had to go searching for him/her.
In Rappacini's Daughter, however, the Devil came to Giovanni. Furthermore he came in the
form of a beautiful woman...a
frightening concept.
Young Goodman Brown is told in the first person narrative. It is therefore from one
persons point of view. It is a warning of
what could happen to you if you stray from probity, and your moral ideals. All the
decisions were clearly made by Brown
himself, and his plight can be avoided. Rappacini's Daughter, however, is told in the a
third person narrative. It is not
from one person's point of view, it is a universal problem which has consequences for the
entire human race. The devil does
not always look as he is supposed to, and is not easily recognizable. He can enthrall you
with splendor, rather than trap you
with terror . The devil can get you anyway he wants, he has agents to do his bidding. As
Beatrice mournfully explains to
Giovanni "But my father,- he has united us in this fearful sympathy" (644). The story is
called Rappacini's Daughter
event though Beatrice seems to be a functioning individual. Should not the story be
called Beatrice? No. Giovanni was
tricked as he thought Beatrice was "a tender warmth of girlish womanhood. She was human"
(638). All Beatrice really
represents is Rappacini's, or the devil's messenger sent to trap the good, unsuspecting
Giovanni, an unavoidable fate.
Young Goodman Brown certainly knew the difference between faith and evil. He, however,
wanted the best of both worlds
to remain intact. In fact he promises himself that "after this night I'll cling to her
skirts and follow her to heaven" (611).
All he wants is this one night of evil, and then he will return to the faith, and cling
onto his wife. Brown wants to keep
faith and evil as two separate distinct entities. Giovanni, however realizes that they
are not two separate things, and that
you must choose one or the other, as he says about Beatrice "whatever mist of evil might
see to have gathered over her, the
real Beatrice was a heavenly angel" (643). Giovanni knew that Beatrice could not be both
good and bad so he was trying to
decipher what exactly she was. Similarly with Rappacini's garden there are aspects which
point in each direction.
Originally Giovanni had thought of the plants as beautiful, until he realized that they
were in actuality poison. They had
to be one or the other, there could not be independent elements of both within the
garden. That is why Giovanni had to know
whether Beatrice's breath was poison or beauty. He had to know which path she had chosen.
Brown, however, until the
very end wanted to keep good and evil as two perpetual different entities and options. As
Brown was looking up in the forest
where he was deciding his fate he saw at first what he wanted. Brown looked up and saw
that "The blue sky was still
visible, except directly overhead, where this black mass of cloud was sweeping swiftly
northward" (615). To Brown this
was perfect he could still see his faith but the black clouds, evil, had temporarily
moved in for a quick but exciting storm.
Only when the "dark cloud swept away, leaving the clear and silent sky above...and
something fluttered lightly down
through the air...and beheld a pink ribbon" did he realize that he was mistaken (614).
The clouds had left, but the ribbons
had fallen from the clouds. Evil had already started over taking faith, they were
intertwined and one had to be the victor.
Goodman Brown wanted to connect with the devil from the beginning. He did not want to
make a complete break from faith,
yet he wanted just to experience a little of Satan's wonderful pleasures. He was going
after the devil who was painted so
viciously in his catechism. The devil which was worshipped at midnight, in the forest
surrounded, by blazing pines. The
devil he was brought up despising. Brown came into the final confrontation with Faith
from a forest "which was peopled by
frightful sounds, the creaking of trees and the howling of wild beasts", yet he still
heard "church bells tolling in the
distance" (615). He wanted both but he could have only one, and on this night nothing was
keeping him from the lore of the
devil. Goodman Brown stepped forth from his doubts, he "stepped out of the shadow of the
trees and approached the
congregation with whom he felt a loathful brotherhood by the sympathy of all that was
wicked in his heart" (617). Brown
wanted to be evil now, but to be good later. His encounter with Faith at the end
illustrated this need precisely. "And there
they stood the only pair, as it seemed, who were yet hesitating on the verge of
wickedness in this dark world" (618).
Goodman Brown did not know whether he should commit himself, as well as his Faith to a
life of evil, or if they should
both flee from the altar to the arms of faith. Yet Brown continued in his desire for two
separate distinct beings in Faith and
evil. For now he wanted the evil, therefore he beseeched Faith crying- "Faith! Faith!...
, look up to heaven, and resist the
wicked one" (618). Brown thought he had done it. He thought that he had achieved one
night of evil while sustaining his
life of peace. All too soon however, it became clear that his choice of evil was the only
one he would have, as " He would
often awaken at midnight and shrink from the bosom of Faith...for his dying hour was
gloom" (619). This last scene was the
portrayal Goodman Brown's choice of evil and the devil, over faith and his wife.
Giovanni had no thoughts the likes of Goodman Brown, so his confrontation with his lover
represents something entirely
different. Giovanni knew that good and evil could not survive side by side. He had
decided to try and save Beatrice, and
himself, from evil. Giovanni thought "might there not still be a hope of his returning
within the limits of ordinary nature,
and leading Beatrice, the redeemed Beatrice, by the hand" (644)? He had no intention of
killing Beatrice. He himself
offered to drink the potion with Beatrice as he says "Shall we not quaff it together, and
thus be purified from evil" (645)?
Surely if he knew that the potion was poison he would not have offered to drink it.
Giovanni did the opposite of what
Goodman Brown did in his final confrontation. Giovanni chose good over evil yet, "as
poison had been life, the antidote was
death", and he too had to give up his love, his Faith, but through no flaw of his own.
Goodman Brown was not an evil person, just a misguided one. He felt that his life would
not be complete unless he saw things
from both sides of the spectrum. Brown, however did not want to give up the "good" life
for this one minute of evil. In
Puritan society that, one flirtation with the Devil can cost you everything. Young
Goodman Brown abandoned Faith at the
altar and deserved his punishment. For what, however, did Giovanni deserve his cruel
fate? After all he had been made
eternally evil by Beatrice, who was now dead, rather than good, which was Giovanni's goal
for her. Besides Baglioni
himself states to Giovanni that "I tell thee, my poor Giovanni, that Rappacini has a
scientific interest in thee. Though
hast fallen into fearful hands" (635). The devil was coming after Giovanni, it was not
his fault. The last seen in Young
Goodman Brown shows the generic search for the devil, and Goodman Brown is supposed to be
used as "what not to do"
example for the righteous Puritans. Yet the last seen in Rappacini's Daughter is
completely different. It portrays a man
who had to endure great sorrow through no apparent flaw of his own. This, however, is not
the case. Rather in this last
confrontation Hawthorne is pointing out a reason for the demise of Giovanni, and at the
same time rebuking the always
nosy, and homiletic Puritans. Giovanni got in trouble for being too meddlesome. He had to
know whether Beatrice was good
or evil, and that brought about his downfall.
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