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Hawthornes Symbols In The House Of

Seven Gables Essay, Research Paper


Hawthorne?s Symbolism in The House of Seven Gables


American Literature reflects life, and the struggles that we face


during our existence. The great authors of our time incorporate life?s


problems into their literature directly and indirectly. The stories


themselves bluntly tell us a story, however, an author also uses symbols


to relay to us his message in a more subtle manner. In Nathaniel


Hawthorne?s book The House of Seven Gable?s symbolism is eloquently used


to enhance the story being told, by giving us a deeper insight into the


author?s intentions in writing the story.


The book begins by describing the most obvious symbol of the house


itself. The house itself takes on human like characteristics as it is


being described by Hawthorne in the opening chapters. The house is


described as “breathing through the spiracles of one great


chimney”(Hawthorne 7). Hawthorne uses descriptive lines like this to


turn the house into a symbol of the lives that have passed through its


halls. The house takes on a persona of a living creature that exists


and influences the lives of everybody who enters through its doors.


(Colacurcio 113) “So much of mankind?s varied experience had passed


there – so much had been suffered, and something, too, enjoyed – that


the very timbers were oozy, as with the moisture of a heart.” (Hawthorne


27). Hawthorne turns the house into a symbol of the collection of all


the hearts that were darkened by the house. “It was itself like a great


human heart, with a life of its own, and full of rich and somber


reminiscences” (Hawthorne 27). Evert Augustus Duyckinck agrees that “The


chief perhaps, of the dramatis personae, is the house itself. From its


turrets to its kitchen, in every nook and recess without and within, it


is alive and vital.” (Hawthorne 352) Duyckinck feels that the house is


meant to be used as a symbol of an actual character, “Truly it is an


actor in the scene”(Hawthorne 352). This turns the house into an


interesting, but still depressing place that darkens the book in many


ways. Hawthorne means for the house?s gloomy atmosphere to symbolize


many things in his book.


The house also is used to symbolize a prison that has darkened the


lives of its inmates forever. The house is a prison because it prevents


its inhabitants form truly enjoying any freedom. The inhabitants try to


escape from their incarceration twice. Initially, as Phoebe and


Clifford watch the parade of life in the street, Clifford “realizes his


state of isolation from the ?one broad mass of existence-one great life,


- one collected body of mankind,? and he cannot resist the actual


physical attempt to plunge down into the ?surging stream of human


sympathy?” (Rountree 101). Dillingham believes that “Hawthorne clearly


describes Clifford?s great need to become reunited with the world and


hints that this reunion can be accomplished only by death” (Rountree


101). However, Clifford inevitably fails to win his freedom, and he


returns to the solace of his prison house. Clifford and Hepzibah


attempt once more to escape their captive prison, but the house has


jaded them too much already (Rountree 102). This is apparent when


Hepzibah and her brother made themselves ready- as ready as they could,


in the best of their old-fashion garments, which had hung on pegs, or


been laid away in trunks, so long that the dampness and mouldy smell of


the past was on them – made themselves ready, in their faded bettermost,


to go to church. They descended the staircase together, ? pulled open


the front door, and stept across the threshold, and felt, both of them,


as if they were standing in the presence of the whole world? Their


hearts quaked within them, at the idea of taking one step further.


(Hawthorne 169)


Hepzibah and Clifford are completely cut off from the outside world.


They are like prisoners who after being jailed for decades return to


find a world they do not know.(Rountree 101). Clifford is deeply


saddened when he says, ” ?We are ghosts! We have no right among human


beings – no right anywhere, but in this old house”(Hawthorne 169). The


house has imprisoned their souls and trapped their lives. Hence, the


house symbolizes a prison for its inhabitants.


The house also symbolizes the history of the of Pyncheon family dating


back to the original Colonel Pyncheon who had been cursed by Matthew


Maule for the evil way in which the Colonel obtained the land for the


house. The house has collected memories upon memories of the people who


have lived there, beginning with its original owners the Colonel and


Alice Pyncheon. This point of symbolism is argued by E. P. Whipple who


thinks that the house?s elaborate interior symbolizes the history of the


Pyncheon Family. It has mostly the gloomy and grim feel, that was left


by the Colonel. However, it also possesses in some places “that


delicate Alice, ?the fragrance of whose rich and delightful character


lingered about the place where she lived, as a dried rose-bud scents the


drawer where it has withered and perished?” (Crowley 200). The houses


rich history turns it into a very telling symbol of the Pyncheon family.


The house can also be seen as a symbol of darkness versus the light of


outside. Almost all that is linked with the history of the house by the


Pyncheon family seems to be dragged down into a gloomy existence by the


house. In the beginning of the book, one of the few item in the house


that is still bright is a tea set. “Hepzibah brought out some old


silver spoons, with the family crest upon them, and a China tea-set ?


still unfaded, although the tea-pot and small cups were as ancient as


the custom itself of tea-drinking” (Hawthorne 77). This tea set is


allowed to still shine only because it was bought into the family by a


wife of the colonel, and therefore she was not a Pyncheon. However,


everything and everyone else in the house is slowly decaying. Clifford


is readily seen in this manner by Phoebe, when his entrance into the


room “made her feel as if a ghost were coming into the room” (Hawthorne


103). Clifford?s clothes are even used as symbols of the effects that


the house has on all of its prisoners. Clifford is seen in a


“dressing-gown of faded damask”, that has been soiled over time by the


house (Hawthorne 103). Hawthorne also mentions the carpet in the


Colonel?s room that was once plush and fine, but it is now worn, ragged


and old, because it like all other things in the house has become


darkened. The house embodies all that is wicked in mankind. “The


House of Seven Gables, one for each deadly sin, may be no unmeet


adumbration of the corrupted soul of man” (Crowley 192). Ironically,


this is all contrasted with the street which is constantly portrayed as


a bright, cheerful, and active place. Clifford would often look at the


window to the street, and what he would see would “give him a more vivid


sense of active, bustling, and sunshiny existence” then he could ever


find in the house (Hawthorne 162). Hawthorne portrays the street as


containing light and life, while the house contains darkness and


emptiness.


Hawthorne uses many symbols in his writing, but the most obvious is the


house. It is used to symbolize and tell us many things. The house,


however, is not the only symbol Hawthorne uses in his novel. He also


uses the portrait of Colonel Pyncheon to symbolize the evil that still


watches over the house. The portrait has an unsettling effect on many


of the house?s inhabitants, and it is even compared to the likeness of


Judge Pyncheon. It is possibly this likeness and the evil feel Clifford


has for the picture that leads him to command Hepzibah to “pray cover it


with a crimson curtain ? It must not stare me in the face!” (Hawthorne


111). The portrait also possesses the very sought after deed

, but it


keeps the family from reaching the deed because it is hidden in a recess


behind the picture. Similarly, the Pyncheon family has had several past


problems because of greed over the deed (Abel 263). The picture has


always held the deed which is a way to escape from the house, but the


picture instead holds the deed until it is useless. The picture


therefore continues to punish the family for their vicious actions


against the Maules. The picture remains with the family, just like the


guilt that has been passed on generation from generation over the


Colonel?s immoral treatment of Matthew Maule (Abel 260). Hawthorne has


turned the portrait into a lasting symbol of the families torrid past.


Another symbol used by Hawthorne in the novel is the deed to the


Pyncheon family Indian ground in Maine. The deed symbolizes the freedom


of the inhabitants of the house. Like the inhabitants of the house, the


deed is locked away in secrecy because of the immoral actions of the


Colonel. The Pyncheon family was once part of the socially elite class,


and considered to have much worth. However, over years the family has


slowly lost this status, and “The decline of the Pyncheon aristocracy is


indicated in terms of Hepzibah?s having to open a cent-shop in order to


earn a livelihood” (Rountree 97). The deed was also once quite


valuable and even fought over by the Pyncheon family members, but it too


now has lost its value. This seems to be the fate of almost everything


that resides in the cursed Pyncheon house.


Hawthorne also uses symbols that are not connected to the house. The


elm tree is an example of how Hawthorne symbolizes nature and life. The


elm tree begins small compared to the house, but it slowly grows. Its


branches stretch out and eventually it becomes bigger than the house.


Also, “the aged tree dangles a golden branch ?before the main entrance


of the seven gables? ” (Abel 156). This branch symbolizing the evil in


the house, and it is compared to “golden branch, that gained Aeneas and


Sybil admittance into Hades” (Abel 156). However, the rest of the tree


remains bustling with life. The tree eventually conquers the house


symbolizing that life has finally beaten death. The tree also has


continued to go on during the generations of Pyncheons that have passed


through the house. This showing that despite bad circumstances life


will continue (Abel 258). The tree is one of the ways that Hawthorne


symbolized the vivid life that was going on outside the house.


The well outside of the house symbolizes the past and even tells of the


future of the Pyncheon family. The well originally owned by the Maule


family was a prized possession in the salt water area because the spring


contained in it fresh water. The well was “a desired asset in real


estate” so the Colonel wanted it (Kaul 144). However, the well became


soiled once the Colonel took over the land. The well can also act as


the “soul of the house” which is now polluted (Abel 259). The well


stays true to all of Hawthorne?s symbols of house, because it too


becomes tainted and useless after the Pyncheon family takes it. The


well also shows the future as some gifted eyes can see images in it.


Hawthorne ends his novel with the well “throwing up a succession of


kaleidoscopic pictures” about the lives of Hepzibah, Clifford, and


others (Hawthorne 319). The well is used in both these ways to add a


metaphysical element to the story and another level.


Hawthorne uses the railroad to symbolize a “microcosm of society” (Arac


15). It is through the railroad that Clifford and Hepzibah try to


escape into society. Clifford yearns to become part of life, and his


transfusion into the life of the train seems to renew him (Arac 15).


Upon entering the train Clifford tells Hepzibah, “Let you and I be


happy! As happy as that youth, and those pretty girls, at their game of


ball!” (Hawthorne 258). For a short time, Clifford tries to be like the


others on the train. However, his attempts are in vain, because


Clifford cannot join the train while he is still tied to the house.


Instead, he holds conversations that continue to return to the topic of


the house. Clifford?s mind is fixated on the house which arouses


suspicion from his train companions. Eventually after prattling on,


Clifford realizes that he can never really leave the house and join


society. Thus, he gets Hepzibah, and they separate from the bustling


life of the train at a station only to return to the dismal confines of


solitude (Arac 16). Clifford once disassociated from life, the train,


loses his vivacity and energy, and he no longer leads Hepzibah.


Instead, he slumps down and needs help to find his way (Erlich 142).


Hawthorne uses the entire railroad excursion to symbolize another


attempt and failure by Hepzibah and Clifford to escape into life, but


they end up only lonely with no where to turn but back to the dreaded


house (Arac 16).


Nathaniel Hawthorne believed that many things in life had meaning. This


carries over into his writing and help account for his frequent use of


symbolism. Hawthorne is trying to write a good story, and to do this he


incorporates many symbols that add depth to his writing. One of the


themes that is seen most often by his symbols is that retribution


eventually comes for everybody. The house continues to torment all the


descendants of Colonel Pyncheon because of his immoral act. The picture


punishes generations of Pyncheons too by hiding the deed. The deed like


the family eventually decays, and the family is never allowed to use


it. All these symbols show us how Hawthorne is trying to teach us that


bad actions will be punished. Hawthorne also tries to show us that


descendants carry with them the burdens of their ancestors. Like Adam


and Eve passed down original sin, Colonel Pyncheon passed down a cursed


life to all his offspring. The house, well, and portrait. The portrait


cannot be moved because of a special clause, and it haunts generation


after generation. The well has also been affected by the past, and


future generations have to deal with the result of past generations?


actions. The house continually hurts people until eventually the


families make up and flee the cursed house. Hawthorne also uses symbols


such as the train and tree to show us life outside of the house is


good. Hawthorne is trying to show that there is good and evil in the


world competing with each other. All these symbols that Hawthorne uses


enhances his writing so that we may look at it on a more thoughtful


level. Through these symbols, he also expresses to us his basic beliefs


in life. Hawthorne meant to not only entertain with his writings, but


also to inform if possible. This explains the extensive use of


symbolism in his work. Overall, Hawthorne did not just write a story,


he wrote a classic that has stood the test of time.


Abel, Darrel. The Moral Picturesque: Studies in Hawthorne?s Fiction.


Indiana: Purdue UP, 1988.


Arac, Jonathan. “The House and the Railroad: Dombey and Son and The


House of the Seven Gables.” The New England Quarterly volume LI (1978)


: 3 – 22.


Colacurcio, Michael. “The Sense of an Author: The Familiar Life and


Strange Imaginings of Nathaniel Hawthorne.” ESQ 103 (1981) : 113.


Crowley, Donald. Hawthorne: The Critical Heritage. London: W & J


Mackay Co. Ltd., 1970.


Erlich, Gloria. Family Themes and Hawthorne?s Fiction: The Tenacious


Web. New Jersey: Rutgers UP, 1984.


Hawthorne, Nathaniel. The House of Seven Gables: An Authoritative Text


Backgrounds and Sources Essays in Criticism. Ed. Seymour Gross. New


York: W W Norton & Co.,1967.


Kaul, A., ed. Hawthorne: A Collection of Critical Essays. New Jersey :


Prentice – Hall Inc., 1966.


Rountree, Thomas, ed. Critics on Hawthorne. Florida: U of Miami P,


1972.

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