Tuesday, September 17, 2019
The Curious Style of Hawthornes Young Goodman Brown :: Young Goodman Brown YGB
The Curious Style of ââ¬Å"Young Goodman Brownâ⬠à à à à à à à à à à à à à à The multi-faceted style found in Nathaniel Hawthorneââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"Young Goodman Brownâ⬠has many features of interest. It is the intent of this essay to elaborate on these features, with support from literary critics where available. à Herman Melville in ââ¬Å"Hawthorne and His Mosses,â⬠(in The Literary World August 17, 24, 1850) has a noteworthy comment on Hawthorneââ¬â¢s style: à Nathaniel Hawthorne is a man, as yet, almost utterly mistaken among men. Here and there, in some quiet arm-chair in the noisy town, or some deep nook among the noiseless mountains, he may be appreciated for something of what he is. But unlike Shakespeare, who was forced to the contrary course by circumstances, Hawthorne (either from simple disinclination, or else from inaptitude) refrains from all the popularizing noise and show of broad farce, and blood-besmeared tragedy; content with the still, rich utterances of a great intellect in repose, and which sends few thoughts into circulation, except they be arterialized at his large warm lungs, and expanded in his honest heart. à How beautifully does this critic capture the basic attitude of Hawthorne, who avoids the ââ¬Å"noise and showâ⬠and emphasizes his ââ¬Å"rich utterances.â⬠Could Hawthorneââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"rich uterancesâ⬠be the reason for Henry Seidel Canby in ââ¬Å"A Skeptic Incompatible with His Time and His Pastâ⬠to talk about the ââ¬Å"dignityâ⬠of his style? ââ¬Å"And indeed there is a lack of consistence between the scorn that our younger critics shower upon Hawthorneââ¬â¢s moral creations and their respect for his style. They admit a dignity in the expression that they will not allow to the thing expressedâ⬠(62). Canby continues: à Hawthorneââ¬â¢style has a mellow beauty; it is sometimes dull, sometimes prim, but it is never for an instant cheap, never, like our later American styles, deficient in tone and unity. It is a style with a patina that may or may not accord with current tastes, yet, as with Browne, Addison, Lamb, Thoreau, is undoubtedly a style. Such styles spring only from rich ground, long cultivated, and such a soil was Hawthorneââ¬â¢s. . . . Holding back from the new life of America into which Whitman was to plunge with such exuberance, he kept his style, like himself, unsullied by the prosaic world of industrial revolution, and chose, for his reality, the workings of the moral will. You can scarcely praise his style and condemn his subjects.
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