¶ … Male Figures
In works of fiction, the hero's journey will always be fraught with danger. He will not only have to overcome his own shortcomings, but will also encounter individuals who hope to impede his journey and prevent him from accomplishing his goals or individuals who will help them overcome their obstacles and succeed. Literature throughout history and literature that transcends cultures exhibit this same proclivity. Each component of the hero's journey, beginning with his quest, his initiation into the situation which will lead to his development, his separation from his origin, and finally his transformation at the end of the story is heavily dictated by the attention and communication he receives from the other male character. The stories "Young Goodman Brown," The Epic of Gilgamesh, Beowulf, and "The Legend of King Arthur" all show pairings of male characters, the protagonist and another male figure who either acts as an adversary or a figure of support, which are integral to the fulfillment or failure of the hero's quest.
In Nathaniel Hawthorne's "Young Goodman Brown," a young man desires to walk through the woods with the devil in order to see the supposed truth of the people around him and also to test his own value as a member of the Puritan community. His quest is to prove to himself that despite whatever the devil might promise him and whatever revelations the devil might make, he is worthy of his position in the community. However, when he is brought into the devil's web, he finds that he was not as prepared for the visions as he had originally supposed. Going into the woods and witnessing what the reader is meant to understand as false visions is all that is needed to initiate Brown into doing the devil's work. By allowing himself to physically separate from his good wife, who is a pure soul and go into the woods with the self-proclaimed devil, he has already made the choice which will determine his ultimate end. Brown says, "After this one night, I'll cling to her skirts and follow...
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