English 102 Essay 4 Final Draft
English 102 Essay 4 Final Draft
English 102 Essay 4 Final Draft
Brayton LaRochelle
English 102
Professor Cotter
21 April 2013
The representation of an author’s ideas can be portrayed through a variety of genres, each
having its own unique strengths in reaching the imagination of readers. The examples being
provided that confirm this statement are The Crucible by Arthur Miller and “Young Goodman
Brown” by Nathaniel Hawthorne. The amount of “tools” at the disposal of each author depends
heavily on the type of genre that they are writing. It is clear through use of things such as
symbolism, figurative language, and intense imagery that a short story has much more freedom
as to what can be presented to a reader. A drama, on the other hand, is very limited and has little
but dialogue to present an entire story to the reader. This challenge is overcome in The Crucible
by adding small sections of normal prose, but examples are limited, and overall it is dialogue that
presents the real message. The Crucible is a drama based on the actual events of the witch trials
that occurred in Salem, Massachusetts in the late seventeenth century, while “Young Goodman
Brown” is a short story that is entirely fictional but takes place in Salem as well. Although these
two works are alike in setting, yet different in overall plot, the genre in which they are written
has strong control over the tools such as symbolism, figurative language, and imagery that the
authors can use to present the stories in the way that is most effective.
The major factor that connects these two works is their setting, which is in Salem,
Massachusetts in the late seventeenth century. In a story that takes place in this place and time, it
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seems almost inevitable that religion, witches, and turmoil are going to appear. These two works
are by no means an exception to this statement. The difference between the two is that The
Crucible is entirely based on this massive witch hunt within the city of Salem, whereas in
“Young Goodman Brown,” this event is used as means to build a fictional short story. The
Crucible is a dramatic presentation of true events that occurred in Salem in the 1600s and
recounts the trial and execution of many innocent people who were wrongfully accused of both
literally and metaphorically dancing with the devil. Throughout the play, tension builds between
characters until the whole plot turns into a he-said she-said mess of lies and false accusations,
which can exist only because of the fact that witchcraft, as they knew it, was impossible to prove,
and therefore “hard evidence” extended to a witness or two. This four-act play follows the people
of Salem through the events of a witch hunt that works its way in circles due mostly to lies and
false accusations. It ends tragically as innocent men and women are hanged in front of the town.
“Young Goodman Brown” is a story of a man who sets off into the woods after bidding his wife
Faith goodbye, to meet with the devil for an unknown reason. He is then forced to decide if he
should take the side of the devil and join him in an evil ceremony. He declines, saying that he is
from a family of good honest Christians, and he is swayed only when he realizes that every
religious person from his town was too joining the devil for this ceremony. This story borrows
some of the witches from the Salem witch trials and makes them into characters within this story.
characterization typically occurs in each of the two genres, with the exception that some
characters are given a small background in actual story-like structure in The Crucible, which is
seemingly a little uncommon in drama (although not unheard of). In “Young Goodman Brown,”
Hawthorne provides a good description for each character as they are being introduced. He gives
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the readers information on the moral background of each character, along with their role in the
story and how they relate to the other characters. This outward description of characters to help
build their meaning for the rest of the story is a technique unique to a story. While Hawthorne
can spend as long as he desires presenting his characters, Miller is limited to just a brief stage
direction and the dialogue between characters. An example of the background Miller gives on his
characters is in a brief entry in the middle of an act where one the author stops to describe Mr.
Hale with more detail than you would receive from just dialogue and stage direction alone. It
reads “Mr. Hale is nearing forty, a tight-skinned, eager-eyed intellectual” (Miller 32). It then
goes on to describe his history of removing witchcraft and his personal conflicts with other
characters from the story. He also uses clues to allow us to get into the heads of the characters
and even hints that some of the characters are not how they seem. He continues to describe Mr.
Hale’s disposition by proposing “His painfully acquired armory of symptoms, catchwords, and
diagnostic procedures are not to be put to use at last…and he has passed hundreds of rumors that
make him smile at the ignorance of the yeomanry in this most precise science” (Miller 36).
These long stage directions present characters similarly to how they would normally be
presented in a short story and are in some ways similar to how Hawthorne presents the characters
in “Young Goodman Brown.” On the other hand, the tools Hawthorne uses including the use of
intense imagery and highly descriptive characterization, give readers an excellent image of how
these characters act just does not exist as stage direction within plays such as The Crucible,
The challenge of presenting characters to readers in a play is a little more difficult. In The
Crucible, characters are given a short, one-sentence introduction, and it is up to the reader to
draw further conclusions as they watch the roles of the characters play out through the dialogue
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between them. There are so many characters being presented in The Crucible that are being
introduced at a time, that it requires attentive reading to keep track of who is who and what their
overall contribution to the play is. This seems to be one drawback to reading a play, because
unlike a short story, a play has very little room to slowly introduce characters. The style of the
short story, in this case, is much more effective at providing an understanding of the background
and physical description of characters. On the other hand, the style of the play is more effective
at understanding exactly how characters respond to each other and act in conversation. This is
likely to be one of the reasons Miller chose to present this work in the form of a play. This is
arguably the most effective way of exposing the insanity that occurred in the late 1600s because
it allows readers to understand how this tragic event was able to continue solely by word of
mouth.
The use of symbolism between the two works is heavily unbalanced, similarly to any
drama compared to short story. “Young Goodman Brown” uses a substantial amount of deep
symbolism, whereas The Crucible, appeared at first to have no symbolic meaning whatsoever.
This is likely due to the fact that use of symbolism in a drama is much more difficult in general
than in a short story. Symbols from “Young Goodman Brown” include the serpent staff that is
carried by the devil, which is a biblical reference to the serpent in the story of Adam and Eve,
and is symbolic of the devil and temptation. This symbol is presented by Hawthorne in a way
that is only possible in a short story. He describes it as “so curiously wrought that it might almost
be seen to twist and wriggle itself like a living serpent.” This use of imagery to present the
symbol is quite difficult for a playwright, and is an example of Hawthorne’s use of these tools to
make his work more effective at immersing his readers right into the scene of the story. There is
also the pink ribbon that is worn by Young Goodman Brown’s wife Faith. It is likely to
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symbolize youth and purity. This ribbon is mentioned three times throughout the story. It is
mentioned first in the beginning when discussing her innocence. The second time it is mentioned
is when she is seen by her lover going to meet with the devil. When Young Goodman Brown
witnesses her with the devil, it lands in his arms, showing that it was shed along with her
innocence. Brown cries out upon this realization, “My Faith is gone. There is No good on earth;
and sin is but a name. Come, devil; for to thee is this world given” (Hawthorne 406). It finally
returns to her at the end of the story when all is seemingly all right, and Young Goodman Brown
is deciding whether the entire experience was a dream. The ribbon to symbolize this innocence is
absolutely impossible for a playwright because a pink ribbon that can only be worn by an actor
may mean nothing to an audience. On the other hand, Miller is able to use dialogue to present his
characters in a way that is effective for a play, and therefore does not need symbolism at all.
Hawthorne, on the other hand, can add this deep meaning to a seemingly meaningless article of
clothing Faith’s name itself is a symbol of her being heavily devoted to her religion and the least
likely to cross over to the devil, which intensifies the scene where she too is tempted to join in on
the disturbing ceremony. The name Young Goodman Brown seems to also be a symbol of his
character, which can give this story an almost allegorical meaning if a reader believes that these
characters were used to represent mankind in general. According to Paul Miller, Young
Goodman Brown himself can indeed be viewed as a symbol for either mankind in general or for
Critics have agreed that Young Goodman Brown, in the course of the Hawthorne
story of the same name, moves from a state of simple faith in God and his fellow
man to an evil state involving damnation, or at least soul jeopardy. They have also
generally implied that as well as being an individual, Young Goodman Brown is
in some sense intended to be a type. They have not generally indicated, however,
whether they think he is intended to typify all man kind or only one segment of it
(Miller, Cynicism 255).
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He goes on to make clear that he finds Hawthorne’s point is well based if it is to refer to certain
groups, but not so much if it is intended to refer to humanity. This is an interesting case where
Hawthorne has the ability in the short story to include symbolism that can be very loosely
interpreted. D.M. Mckethian, however, does not see it to be open to such a loose interpretation.
He believes that Hawthorne saw that every man had some bad or “evil” side but did not find it to
be part of human nature. Mckethian states, “Hawthorne himself believed that evil impulses visit
every human heart, but he did not believe that most men are mainly evil or that most men
convert any considerable proportion of their evil impulses into evil deeds” (Mckethian 95).
Finally, the woods, which are given almost human qualities seem to symbolize temptation as
they lure in and scare Brown simultaneously, as if they too are tempting him. Hawthorne uses his
many available tools as a short story writer to bring life and deeper meaning to an already
exciting story.
Hawthorne also portrays a message of the good and bad contained within people of this
time in respect to the ironic idea that the holiest members of a town can also be those committing
the most evil, which is beyond apparent throughout The Crucible. During the crucible, the main
plot is that the religious and court leaders—people who are typically looked very highly upon
within the town— are the ones performing wrongful persecutions and putting people to death by
hanging. Clearly ironic, is as bizarre and horrible as the persecution of innocent people under
McCarthy almost two hundred years later. The difference in how it is portrayed by Hawthorne
suits the format of a short story wonderfully and this is by symbolic meaning as opposed to the
straight-forward dialogue of The Crucible. An example by Hawthorne of this that would work
only in a short story and not in a play is contained in the section of the story that reads “There
was one voice, of a young women, uttering lamentations, yet with an uncertain sorrow, and
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entreating for some favor, which, perhaps it would griever her to obtain; and all the unseen
multitude, both saints and sinners, seemed to encourage her onward.” This sense of interiority
that symbolizes the town being drawn towards evil is a technique he uses that is unique to a
story, and is an element that just would not work in a play. Hawthorne shows this idea further
through the slow revelation to the antagonist that the members of the church who he saw as the
most holy were, in reality, witches and followers of the devil. This is another example of an
element of the story that could not be used in a play. The dark traveler even reveals to Brown
that his father and grandfather (men that Brown saw as role models of his faith) were too secret
followers of the devil. This idea that men often have two sides is presented by Fennye Cherry:
This life-altering revelation that causes Brown to question his entire faith ends with a moment in
the story where Brown reaches a point of no return. It is in the second to last scene where Brown
is at the devil’s ceremony and he sees that Faith —his wife and final remaining symbol of purity
and belief in God— appears. It is this realization that his wife too has crossed over to the side of
the devil that will ruin Brown forever. Upon returning to the village in the final scene, Brown is
unaware if everything that happened was all a dream. Nonetheless, he is ruined forever and his
entire life continues downhill due to this revelation that the people in his town may all be living
lies. Walter Paulits views this idea by Hawthorne as a symbol of the ambivalence that persists in
humankind in regard to the seemingly fine line between the choice of good and evil. Although
Brown does not give in to the devil himself, he is changed to the point where he does not
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understand good from evil after seeing his entire faithful community dance with the devil
himself. Walter Paultis makes this argument by stating, “His stance becomes, therefore, that of
the man who opts for the wrong by seeing the wrong as right. And the decision does not remove
ambivalence, because all the rest of his life is spent in pursuing the knowledge he has denied
Although The Crucible apparently lacks symbol altogether, it becomes clear after reading
Bruce Daniel’s idea that “These ghosts [ghosts of the witches that now “haunt” modern
classrooms] were brought out of the attic and put on the stage in 1953 when Arthur Miller
discovered the roots of McCarthyism in Salem”(daniels 663). It is fair to assume that anyone
who has any familiarity with this scandal that occurred in the 1950s can connect the series of
court hearings and false accusations that led to criminal convictions, to the witch trials. The fact
that these law-abiding members of society were put on trial simply because someone from town
accused them of being a witch is nearly identical to the McCarthy hearings where people were
put on trial simply because of unsupported suspicion of communism. This idea transforms this
non-symbolic story of an ancient witch hunt into an entire allegory that was quite politically
relevant at the time it was written. This is an ingenious example of how a playwright can use the
little tools at their disposal to create a vast collection of deeper meaning, which in this example is
consistent throughout the entire story. Although Miller is unable to use symbol and interiority
like Hawthorne to present a message, he instead uses the tools such as dialogue of the characters
to provide an allegory to the dialogue that may have occurred during the McCarthy hearings.
These two works show contrast that exemplifies and puts emphasis upon the common
differences between the characterization, symbolic meaning, structure, and overall presentation
of a drama compared to a short story. In both pieces of literature there were examples presented
that express the intense imagery, although each work was forced to use an entirely different
approach. Miller used the few tools available, which consisted of dialogue and stage direction, to
present both a historical tragedy, and allegorical message that conserved historical accuracy
while presenting an overall message of the McCarthy hearings of the 20th century. Hawthorne
also made use of the tools at his disposal by using symbolism to present other ideas about faith of
the time and possibly even a timeless account of man in general that maintains relevancy in
modern times when many people do not always practice what they preach, as the saying goes.
Together both works presented stories that were very relevant to the scene in which they took
place, a place that was teeming with religious turmoil. Whether it is a farfetched fictional short
story, or a very real play, both authors used virtually every tool in their arsenal to present the
theme in a way that is likely to draw the attention of readers for centuries to come.
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Annotated bibliography
Cherry, Fannye N.. The Sources of Hawthorne’s “Young Goodman Brown”. American
Literature, Vol. 5. No. 4 (Jan., 1934) 342-348
Daniels, Bruce C. Bewitched, Bothered, and Bewildered: Salem’s Witches Haunt New England
History. Reviews in American History, Vol. 26, No 4 (Dec., 1998) 663-667
Meyer, Michael. Nathaniel Hawthorne: Young Goodman Brown. “The Bedford Introduction to
Paulits, Walter J. Ambivalence in “Young Goodman Brown”. American Literature, Vol 41, No 4
(Jan., 1970) 557-584