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Young Goodman Brown | The Woe That Is Madness: Goodman Brown and the Face of the Fire

In this essay, the author contends that Hawthorne's "Young Goodman Brown" is "our most effective literary work in recreating the atmosphere in which the witchcraft hysteria'' of the Salem Puritans occurred.

Hawthorne, if any one, was equipped to write the definitive novel on the Salem witchcraft delusion; but he never confronted it head on. ''Alice Doane's Appeal" conjures up the victims from the graveyard, Grandfather's Chair and "Main Street" give the barest bones of a synopsis, ''Sir William Phips'' merely hints at it, and The House of the Seven Gables fictionalizes its heritage of guilt. But nowhere does Hawthorne give the dramatic account in depth of the trial and tragedy of Rebecca Nurse, George Burroughs, John...

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