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Young Goodman Brown and The Fall of the House of Usher

Decent Essays

While reading “Young Goodman Brown” by Nathaniel Hawthorne, I couldn’t help but feel a constant overwhelming sense of dread. The root of this could have come from the story’s dark setting deep within an “haunted forest” or from Brown’s mysterious “Devil”-esque companion. While I read, another story came into my mind; the story of the “Fall of the House of Usher” by Edgar Allan Poe. In Poe’s tale the same heart pounding emotion can be felt as he describes the reunion of two friends within “the House of Usher.” With the manors “eye-like windows” and “sorrowful impression,” Poe wastes no time in setting the Gothic mood. Through their distinct writing styles Hawthorne and Poe establish a common Gothic theme within their stories.
In Hawthorne’s …show more content…

When the narrator arrives he discovers his friend has changed significantly over the years and looks sickly. He is introduced his friend’s twin who suffers from catalepsy and through a turn of events Usher convinces his friend that his sister has died and the must entomb her under the house.
The setting of this story takes place in the Usher manor a creepy place located in a “dreary tract of country.” When the narrator first sees the estate he feels “an insufferable gloom” because of the manors horrible state. With its “eye-like windows” and “decayed trees...I can compare to no earthly sensation more properly than to the afterdream of the reveler upon opium.” Poe establishes a Gothic setting through the narrator's point of view just like in “Young Goodman Brown.”
The main characters in Poe’s short story are similar to those within “Young Goodman Brown.” The narrator is a man who believes that he is just visiting his friend from boyhood and trusts his friend Roderick Usher the same way Brown trusted the man he walked with. But Rodrick is mentally ill and as the narrator spends time with him he too goes through a period of mania. In the tale the terrified narrator says, “I felt creeping upon me, by slow yet certain degrees, the wild influences of his own fantastic yet impressive superstitions.” Roderick Usher who is described as,” a cadaverousness of complexion,” is the

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