Tuesday, September 3, 2019
Hawthornes Characters: Pride Of Intellect :: essays research papers
 Hawthorne's Characters: Pride of Intellect      Many of Hawthorne's characters wrap themselves in a pride of intellect.  The characters become victims of their pride and consequently suffer. Goodman  Brown, from "Young Goodman Brown" and Hooper, from "The Minister's Black Veil"  are two characters that suffer from a pride of intellect. Their pride causes  them similar problems and they end up living similar lives, although they came  from different backgrounds.  Hooper and Goodman Brown both become isolated from society. Hooper had a  revelation, and he feels that he truly understands human nature and sin.  However, he believes that he is above everybody else because he has this  understanding. This is what causes the major separation between Hooper and  society. After Hooper dawns the veil he can no longer function or act as a  normal person, because of this feeling of superiority. His perception of an  ultimate human isolation leaves him the man most isolated in what Hawthorne  describes as that saddest of all prisons, his own heart . . . "(The Minister's  Black Veil,228). The veil affects all parts of his life, his fiance leaves him  and he can no longer relate to his congregation the same way. "As a result of  wearing the veil, Hooper becomes a man apart, isolated from love and sympathy,  suspected and even feared by his congregation"(Minister's Black Veil, 228).  Goodman Brown suffers the same fate because he also has a feeling of superiority  over the rest of the village. He attains this feeling after he sees all the  people that he though were good and pure participating in satanic rituals in the  forest. He looses all faith in the community and feels as though he is above  them because he was able to resist the devil. The lack or trust trusting that  Goodman Brown had separated him from the community because he was a strong  Puritan and felt as though he could not associate devil worshipers. "Brown,  despairing and embittered, belongs neither to the Devil's party nor to the only  other life-sustaining cause he knows--that of the Puritan faith and the Puritan  community"(Levy,119).  Hooper and Goodman Brown's pride of intellect cause them to loose a loved  one and their kind and loving nature. Hooper drives his fiance Elizabeth away  by wearing the veil. Elizabeth sees how Hooper is separating himself and it  scares her away from their purposed marriage. "Hooper's fiancee, seems at first  unawed by the veil. To her it is merely a cloth that hides the face she most  delights to see. But, like a sudden twilight in the air, Elizabeth suddenly  senses the unapproachable inner isolation of the man who wears it, and its'    					    
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