Tuesday, June 5, 2012

What function does Faith's ribbon have in the story "Young Goodman Brown"?

It is also important to consider Faith's context -- the wearing of pink ribbons by a Puritan woman (who dressed very conservatively and avoided bright color) may be seen as an expression of joyful innocence or the budding sexuality of a young wife (remember, she wants him to sleep beside her, and she can barely restrain herself from kissing him in the street), but it may also be seen as an indication that she is not a "good" Puritan, and thus serve to foreshadow her later presence at the Black Mass.

Brown believes that because Faith is elected to Heaven, he will be as well -- and when he sees her ribbons in the forest, that belief crumbles.

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In Act III, scene 2, why may the establishment of Claudius's guilt be considered the crisis of the revenge plot?

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