Nathaniel Hawthorne - Carlisle County Public Schools
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Transcript Nathaniel Hawthorne - Carlisle County Public Schools
1804-1864
Was one of two great novelists of the mid-ninteenth
century (the other being Melville)
Born in Salem, Mass., where his family had lived for six
generations. Earliest ancestors were Puritans.
John Hathorne, one of his ancestors, was a presiding
judge at the Salem Witchcraft Trials
Felt guilty because of his ancestors’ behavior
Added (w) to his last name
Wrote The Scarlet Letter
Father was a sea captain who was lost at sea when he
was four; mother became a grieving recluse.
Went to Bowdoin College, where he graduated in 1825.
Famous classmates:
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Franklin Pierce (14th president (1853-1857))
Publisher Horatio Bridge
For twelve years after college, secluded himself to
become a better writer
1837 – Twice-Told Tales, a collection of short stories, was
published.
Engaged to Sophia Peabody; married 5 years later.
Gained fame and popularity with the publication of The
Scarlet Letter
Themes of sin/guilt and the problem of evil and isolation
also prevalent in The House of Seven Gables, published in
1851.
Became increasingly gloomy
Money worries
Civil War
Writer’s block
Dark Romantic, careful craftsman, symbolic writer
Elements and themes:
1. Belief in Order: part of this is the proper relationship
between men and women
2. Love: central reality of life; woman is the redemptive
agent in fighting evil
3. The Heart is Superior to the Head: if you use only your
head, you become either a fool or a fiend. Many of H’s
works include an intellectual villain (cool, calculating
scientist)
4. Alienation and Isolation: either self-caused or societal
or both
5. Initiation: an alienated character attempts to rid
himself of isolation
6. Guilt: enforced by Puritanical society or heritage…
also guilt v. innocence
7. Pride: Hawthorne treats pride as evil, “Pride cometh
before a fall.”
8. Allegory: Didastic and Moralistic
Famous Works:
The Minister’s Black Veil
Rappaccini’s Daughter
The Birthmark
Young Goodman Brown
The Scarlet Letter
First published in the 1836 edition of The Token and
Atlantic Souvenir.
Later republished in Twice-Told Tales in 1837
Hawthorne may have been inspired by a true event. A
clergyman named Joseph Moody of York, Maine,
nicknamed "Handkerchief Moody," accidentally killed
a friend when he was a young man and wore a black
veil from the man's funeral until his own death.
Main characters: Reverend Hooper, Elizabeth
Point of view: 3rd person, omniscient
Conflict:
Man v. Himself (guilt)
Man v. Man (the congregation/world at large)
Themes:
Hidden Nature of Guilt
Communion of Sinners
Morality
Setting: 18th century town in Puritan New England
Climax: final question upon deathbed of whether or
not he will remove the veil.
Resolution: no clear resolution, as the meaning behind
the veil is never revealed, but rather left to reader
interpretation and estimation.
Reverend Hooper challenges everyone to recognize the
black veil and hidden sin in their own lives.
Hawthorne’s present elements:
Love
Alienation/Isolation
Guilt
Pride (spiritual)