
Hawthorne was born July 4, 1804, in Salem, Mass., U.S. and died. May
19, 1864, at Plymouth,
N.H.), American novelist and short-story writer who was a master of
the allegorical and symbolic tale. One of the greatest fiction writers
in American literature, he is best-known for The Scarlet Letter (1850)
and The House of the Seven Gables (1851).
"Hawthorne, Nathaniel" Britannica Online.
http://www.eb.com:180/cgi-bin/g?DocF=micro/262/80.html
[Accessed 25 January 1998].
Works
.
Novels
These links were especially recommended by Britannica
On-Line
The Scarlet Letter e-text
The House of the Seven Gables e-text
Hawthorne's ancestors had lived in Salem since the 17th century. His earliest American ancestor, William Hathorne (Nathaniel added the "w" to the name when he began to write), was a magistrate who had sentenced a Quaker woman to public whipping. He had acted as a staunch defender of Puritan orthodoxy, with its zealous advocacy of a "pure," unaffected form of religious worship, its rigid adherence to a simple, almost severe, mode of life, and its conviction of the "natural depravity" of "fallen" man. Hawthorne was later to wonder whether the decline of his family's prosperity and prominence during the 18th century, while other Salem families were growing wealthy from the lucrative shipping trade, might not be a retribution for this act and for the role of William's son John as one of three judges in the Salem witchcraft trials of 1692. When Nathaniel's father ship's captain--died during one of his voyages, he left his young widow without means to care for her two girls and young Nathaniel, aged four. She moved in with her affluent brothers, the Mannings. Hawthorne grew up in their house in Salem and, for extensive periods during his teens, in Raymond, Maine, on the shores of Sebago Lake. He returned to Salem in 1825 after four years at Bowdoin College, in Brunswick, Maine. Hawthorne did not distinguish himself as a young man. Instead, he spent nearly a dozen years reading and trying to master the art of writing fiction.
First
works.
In college Hawthorne had excelled only in composition and had determined
to become a writer. Upon graduation, he had written an amateurish novel,
Fanshawe, which he published at his own expense--only to decide that
it was unworthy of him and to try to destroy all copies. Hawthorne, however,
soon found his own voice, style, and subjects, and within five years of
his graduation he had published such impressive and distinctive stories
as "The Hollow of the Three Hills" and "An Old Woman's Tale." By
1832, "My Kinsman, Major Molineux" and "Roger Malvin's Burial," two of
his greatest tales--and among the finest in the language--had appeared.
"Young Goodman Brown," perhaps the greatest tale of witchcraft ever written,
appeared in 1835.
His increasing success in placing his stories brought him a little
fame. Unwilling to depend any longer on his uncles' generosity, he turned
to a job in the Boston Custom House (1839-40) and for six months in 1841
was a resident at the agricultural cooperative Brook Farm, in West Roxbury,
Mass. Even when his first signed book, Twice-Told Tales, was published
in 1837, the work had brought gratifying recognition but no dependable
income. By 1842, however, Hawthorne's writing had brought him a sufficient
income to allow him to marry Sophia Peabody; the couple rented the Old
Manse in Concord and began a happy three-year period that Hawthorne would
later record in his essay "The Old Manse."
The presence of some of the leading social thinkers and philosophers
of his day, such as Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry Thoreau, and Bronson Alcott,
in Concord made the village the centre of the philosophy of Transcendentalism,
which encouraged man to transcend the materialistic world of experience
and facts and become conscious of the pervading spirit of the universe
and the potentialities for human freedom. Hawthorne welcomed the companionship
of his Transcendentalist neighbours, but he had little to say to them.
Artists and intellectuals never inspired his full confidence, but he thoroughly
enjoyed the visit of his old college friend and classmate Franklin Pierce,
later to become president of the United States. At the Old Manse, Hawthorne
continued to write stories, with the same result as before: literary success,
monetary failure. His new short-story collection, Mosses from an Old Manse,
appeared in 1846.
Mature
novels.
A growing family and mounting debts compelled the Hawthornes' return
in 1845 to Salem, where Nathaniel was appointed surveyor of the Custom
House by the Polk administration (Hawthorne had always been a loyal
Democrat and pulled all the political strings he could to get this appointment).
Three years later the presidential election brought the Whigs into power
under Zachary Taylor, and Hawthorne lost his job; but in a few months of
concentrated effort, he produced his masterpiece, The Scarlet Letter.
The bitterness he felt over his dismissal is apparent in "The Custom House"
essay prefixed to the novel. The Scarlet Letter tells the story of two
lovers kept apart by the ironies of fate, their own mingled strengths and
weaknesses, and the Puritan community's interpretation of moral law, until
at last death unites them under a single headstone. The book made Hawthorne
famous and was eventually recognized as one of the greatest of American
novels.
Determined to leave Salem forever, Hawthorne moved to Lenox, located
in the mountain scenery of the Berkshires in western Massachusetts. There
he began work on The House of the Seven Gables (1851), the story of the
Pyncheon family, who for generations had lived under a curse until it was
removed at last by love.
At Lenox he enjoyed the stimulating friendship of Herman Melville,
who lived in nearby Pittsfield. This friendship, although important for
the younger writer and his work, was much less so for Hawthorne. Melville
praised Hawthorne extravagantly in a review of his Mosses from an Old Manse,
and he also dedicated Moby Dick to Hawthorne. But eventually Melville came
to feel that the friendship he so ardently pursued was one-sided. Later
he was to picture the relationship with disillusion in his introductory
sketch to The Piazza Tales and depicted Hawthorne himself unflatteringly
as "Vine" in his long poem Clarel.
In the autumn of 1851 Hawthorne moved his family to another temporary
residence, this time in West Newton, near Boston. There he quickly wrote
The Blithedale Romance, which was based on his disenchantment with Brook
Farm. Then he purchased and redecorated Bronson Alcott's house in Concord,
the Wayside. Blithedale was disappointingly received and did not produce
the income Hawthorne had expected. He was hoping for a lucrative political
appointment that would bolster his finances; in the meantime, he wrote
a campaign biography of his old friend Franklin Pierce. When Pierce won
the presidency, Hawthorne was in 1853 rewarded with the consulship
in Liverpool, Lancashire, a position he hoped would enable him in a few
years to leave his family financially secure.
Last
years.
The remaining 11 years of Hawthorne's life were, from a creative point
of view, largely anticlimactic. He performed his consular duties faithfully
and effectively until his position was terminated in 1857, and then he
spent a year and a half sight-seeing in Italy. Determined to produce yet
another romance, he finally retreated to a seaside town in England and
quickly produced The Marble Faun. In writing it, he drew heavily upon
the experiences and impressions he had recorded in a notebook kept during
his Italian tour to give substance to an allegory of the Fall of man, a
theme that had usually been assumed in his earlier works but that now
received direct and philosophic treatment.
Back in the Wayside once more in 1860, Hawthorne devoted himself entirely
to his writing but was unable to make any progress with his plans for a
new novel. The drafts of unfinished works he left are mostly incoherent
and show many signs of a psychic regression, already foreshadowed by his
increasing restlessness and discontent of the preceding half dozen years.
Some two years before his death he began to age very suddenly. His hair
turned white, his handwriting changed, he suffered frequent nosebleeds,
and he took to writing the figure "64" compulsively on scraps of paper.
He died in his sleep on a trip in search of health with his friend Pierce.
Brief descriptions
of Major Works.
The Scarlet Letter
The main character of The Scarlet Letter is Hester Prynne, a young married woman who has borne an illegitimate child while living away from her husband in a village in Puritan New England. The husband, Roger Chillingworth, arrives in New England to find his wife pilloried and made to wear the letter A (meaning adulteress) in scarlet on her dress as a punishment for her illicit affair and for her refusal to reveal the name of the child's father. Chillingworth becomes obsessed with finding the identity of his wife's former lover. He learns that Hester's paramour is a saintly young minister, Arthur Dimmesdale, and Chillingworth then proceeds to revenge himself by mentally tormenting the guilt-stricken young man. Hester herself is revealed to be a compassionate and splendidly self-reliant heroine who is never truly repentant for the act of adultery committed with the minister; she feels that their act was consecrated by their deep love for each other. In the end Chillingworth is morally degraded by his monomaniac pursuit of revenge, and Dimmesdale is broken by his own sense of guilt and publicly confesses his adultery before dying in Hester's arms. Only Hester can face the future optimistically, as she plans to ensure the future of her beloved little girl by taking her to Europe.
The House of the Seven Gables is a sombre study in hereditary sin based
on the legend of a curse pronounced on Hawthorne's own family by a woman
condemned to death during the witchcraft trials. The greed and arrogant
pride of the novel's Pyncheon family down the generations is mirrored in
the gloomy decay of their seven-gabled mansion, in which the family's enfeebled
and impoverished poor relations live. At the book's end the descendant
of a family long ago defrauded by the Pyncheons lifts his ancestors' curse
on the mansion and marries a young niece of the family.
The Marble Faun
In The Marble Faun a trio of expatriate American art students in Italy
become peripherally involved to varying degrees in the murder of an unknown
man; their contact with sin transforms two of them from innocents into
adults now possessed of a mature and critical awareness of life's complexity
and possibilities.
Evaluation
Hawthorne's high rank among American fiction writers is the result of
at least three considerations. First, he was a skilful craftsman with an
impressive architectonic sense of form. The structure of The Scarlet Letter,
for example, is so tightly integrated that no chapter, no paragraph, even,
could be omitted without doing violence to the whole. The book's four characters
are inextricably bound together in the tangled web of a life situation
that seems to have no solution, and the tightly woven plot has a unity
of action that rises slowly but inexorably to the climactic scene of Dimmesdale's
public confession. The same tight construction is found in Hawthorne's
other writings also, especially in the shorter pieces, or "tales." Hawthorne
was also the master of a classic literary style that is remarkable for
its directness, its clarity, its firmness, and its sureness of idiom.
A second reason for Hawthorne's greatness is his moral insight.
He inherited the Puritan tradition of moral earnestness, and he was
deeply concerned with the concepts of original sin and guilt and the claims
of law and conscience. Hawthorne rejected what he saw as the Transcendentalists'
transparent optimism about the potentialities of human nature. Instead
he looked more deeply and perhaps more honestly into life, finding in it
much suffering and conflict but also finding the redeeming power
of love. There is no Romantic escape in his works, but rather a firm and
resolute scrutiny of the psychological and moral facts of the human condition.
A third reason for Hawthorne's eminence is his mastery of allegory
and symbolism. His fictional characters' actions and dilemmas fairly
obviously express larger generalizations about the problems of human existence.
But with Hawthorne this leads not to unconvincing pasteboard figures
with explanatory labels attached but to a sombre, concentrated emotional
involvement with his characters that has the power, the gravity, and the
inevitability of true tragedy. His use of symbolism in The Scarlet Letter
is particularly effective, and the scarlet letter itself takes on
a wider significance and application that is out of all proportion to its
literal character as a scrap of cloth.
Works.
Hawthorne's work initiated the most durable tradition in American fiction,
that of the symbolic romance that assumes the universality of guilt and
explores the complexities and ambiguities of man's choices. His greatest
short stories and The Scarlet Letter are marked by a depth of psychological
and moral insight seldom equalled and never surpassed by any American writer.
Major Works
MAJOR WORKS. Novels. Fanshawe, a Tale (1828); The Scarlet
Letter (1850); The House of the Seven Gables (1851); The Blithedale
Romance (1852); The Marble Faun: Or, the Romance of Monte Beni
(British title, Transformation, 1860). (Unfinished novels): Septimius
Felton (1872); The Dolliver Romance, and Other Pieces (1876);
Doctor Grimshawe's Secret (1883); The Ancestral Footstep (1883).
Stories. Twice-Told Tales, including "The Gray Champion," "The Gentle
Boy," "A Rill from the Town Pump," "The Great Carbuncle," "Sights from
a Steeple," and "Dr. Heidegger's Experiment" (1837); 2nd enl. ed.,
including also "The Celestial Railroad" (1842); Mosses from an Old
Manse (1846); The Snow-Image, and Other Tales (1851; also
published as The Snow-Image, and Other Twice-Told Tales, 1852).
(Stories for Children): Grandfather's Chair (1841); Famous Old
People (1841); Liberty Tree (1841); Biographical Stories for
Children (1842); A Wonder Book for Girls and Boys (1851);
Tanglewood Tales for Girls and Boys (1853).
Biography. Life of Franklin Pierce (1852).
Autobiographical. Our Old Home: A Series of English Sketches
(1863); Passages from the American Note-Books of Nathaniel
Hawthorne (1868); Passages from the English Note-Books of
Nathaniel Hawthorne (1870); Passages from the French and
Italian Note-Books of Nathaniel Hawthorne (1871).
BIBLIOGRAPHY.
Nina E. Browne, A Bibliography of Nathaniel Hawthorne (1905,
reprinted 1967); C.E. Frazer Clark, Jr., Nathaniel Hawthorne: A
Descriptive Bibliography (1978); Buford Jones, A Checklist of
Hawthorne Criticism, 1951-1966 (1967); Hawthorne's Works,
"Riverside Edition," 12 vol. (1904); The Centenary Edition of the
Works of Nathaniel Hawthorne, 14 vol. (1963-80); N.H. Pearson
(ed.), The Complete Novels and Selected Tales of Nathaniel
Hawthorne (1937); Henry James, Hawthorne (1879), the earliest
critical study, still valuable; Randall Stewart, Nathaniel Hawthorne: A
Biography (1948), still definitive, though it lacks insight into
Hawthorne's inner life; Arlin Turner, Nathaniel Hawthorne: A
Biography (1980), a thorough account of Hawthorne's reactions to the
world in which he lived but also lacking on Hawthorne's inner life; Hyatt
H. Waggoner, Hawthorne: A Critical Study, rev. ed. (1963); R.H.
Pearce (ed.), Hawthorne Centenary Essays (1964); Frederick C.
Crews, The Sins of the Fathers: Hawthorne's Psychological Themes
(1966); B. Bernard Cohen (ed.), The Recognition of Nathaniel
Hawthorne (1969), a collection of representative critical responses from
the earliest to the present century.
"Hawthorne, Nathaniel" Britannica Online.
<http://www.eb.com:180/cgi-bin/g?DocF=micro/262/80.html>
+
[Accessed 25 January 1998].