Nathaniel Hawthorne: Marija Ilić
Nathaniel Hawthorne: Marija Ilić
Nathaniel Hawthorne: Marija Ilić
Hawthorne
( 1804-1864 )
Marija Ilić
Childhood
Nathaniel Hawthorne was born in Salem, northeastern coastal city in
Massachusetts, famously known in popular culture for Salem Witch Trials1, on
July 4th, 1804. After his father dying of yellow fever very early on in
Nathaniel`s childhood, Nathaniel, together with his mother and two sisters
started living with the Manning family, an arrangement that lasted for ten years.
While living with farmers, Nathaniel learnt a lot about the country ways, until
moving to his own family home, built in Maine by his relatives, which turned
out to be the most positive period of his life. First instances of him writing were
born out of homesickness for his mother and sisters, while being away and
attending school in Salem once again. He actively distributed seven issues of
The Spectator for the point of sheer fun, introducing his adolescent humor.
Hating being away from his family, he actively protested his uncle`s intention to
send him to a boy college, which he eventually managed to do. In 1821, with his
uncle`s financial help, he was sent to the Bowdoin College, also managing to
meet the future president Franklin Pierce, on a stage stop near Portland,
interestingly enough. Apart from president Pierce, he also met poet Henry
Wadsworth Longfellow, congressman Jonathan Cilley and naval reformer
Horatio Bridge. Even during his education , Nathaniel was a rather lazy student,
ignoring school rules and giving into his fantasies. Not long after graduating
from Bowdoin College in 1825, Nathaniel returned to his family home for a
long, twelve year stay during which he focused on writing with purpose and
publishing many short stories, amongst which are titles such as “The Hollow of
the Three Hills” and “An Old Woman`s Tale”, both written in the same year of
1830. The latter found great success and it is still regarded as one of his most
popular books, perhaps for the feel of unfinished dark, romantic work,
depending on a major plot point, but ending just before the mentioned plot point
is understood, as opposed to the first short story which is very much a grim, but
emotional story of witchcraft.
Adulthood
In 1836, Nathaniel was appointed as the editor of the American Magazine of
Useful and Entertaining Knowledge. He started writing interesting short
stories for different magazines and annuals like “Young Goodman
Brown“(1835) and “The Minister`s Black Veil”(1832), none of which garnered
him any specific reputation. In the summer of 1837, Horatio Bridge, seeing his
1
Salem Witch Trials refers to a series of prosecutions that happened in 1692. More than two hundred
people were accused and 19 executed.
friend struggle, offered to cover the risk of publishing a volume of short stories
called “Twice-Told Tales”(1837) which gained him local recognition.
Soon enough, he was appointed as the "Surveyor for the District of Salem
and Beverly and Inspector of the Revenue for the Port of Salem" . Due to
this, he had barely any time to write. In fact, he would often complain about
how short stories would come to him in his dreams, however all of that would
be quickly undone by his occupation. Quickly enough, he was fired due to being
a Democrat, with administration changing after presidential election in 1848 ,
typical victim of spoils system. He wrote a letter of protest to the Boston Daily
Advertiser , angering Whigs and gaining support from fellow Democrats. This
happening became a hugely talked about event in New England. Inspired by a
combination of disloyal politicians, the death of his mother and an unfortunate
death of a young girl whose corpse was retrieved via his boat, he began to write
again. At this time he was living in Massachusetts with his wife Sophia Peabody
and their three children: Una, Julian and Rose. From all of this The Scarlet
Letter(1850) was created, selling huge amount of units, was even pirated in
London and immediately became a best seller. Some friends of his supported
this venture, although others called it unnecessarily intense and painfully
anatomical. His period of writing during these years was incredibly productive,
and he was even able to conceive friends such as Herman Melville, who later
dedicated Moby Dick to Nathaniel. Hawthorne wrote the gothic novel The
House of Seven Gables(1851), attracting more positive reactions from critics
than The Scarlet Letter. The only romance novel Nathaniel wrote in first person,
inspired by the events in his life, was called The Blithedale Romance, written in
1852. Described as the liveliest of his works, it perfectly symbolised time
Hawthorne spent in his small family home. In 1853, Nathaniel Hawthorne
wrote The Life of Franklin Pierce(1852), depicting his good friend as a rather
peaceful man, in the process leaving out important facts such as alcoholism and
Pierce`s statement on slavery, which would damage his friend`s presented
image. Because of this, Hawthorne was presented with a position of consul in
Liverpool that same year, losing it by 1857. , with the change of administration.
Due to this lucrative position, his family was able to tour Italy and France
freely. Two years later they would return to their home estate The Wayside,
and Hawthorne would write his first book in seven years, called The Marble
Faun and soon enough, by meeting Abraham Lincoln and other notable political
figures in Washington, he wrote an essay noting his experiences called “Chiefly
About War Matters”. Whilst not being able to finish several romance novels he
started, Nathaniel Hawthorne died on May 19 1864, in New Hampshire during
sleep and was buried on “Author`s Ridge”, Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in
Massachusetts. Many tribute poems were written by his fellow writers, such as
“The Bells of Lynn” by Longfellow, written in 1866.
Final Hawthorne`s novel written in 1860, was met with mixed reviews from the
critics, with some calling it utterly unoriginal and others praising its ambition to
stay away from typical sentimentality. In early 1858, Hawthorne was inspired to
write his romance when he saw the Faun of Praxiteles in the Palazzo Nuovo of
the Capitoline Museum in Rome. The story revolves around a murder and four
main characters. Two American artists Kenyon and Hilda become friends with
the painter Miriam and a young Italian man, Donatello. She has taken up a new
identity in Rome after some unspecified involvement in some obscure crime.
Hawthorne refuses to ever clear up the mystery.Hawthorne traces the course of
guilt as it moves through the characters. The Marble Faun uses many of the
techniques found in experimental fiction: unexpected time shifts, deliberately
misleading narration, elaborate literary references. It’s essential that the history
of Miriam’s earlier guilt remain unclear, for instance, because this is how she
experiences the past – she’s no longer able to say where her innocence ends and
her responsibility begins. Similarly, Hilda develops a bizarre sense of
complicity in the monk’s murder, even though all she did was witness it from a
distance.Hawthorne involves us in these changes with lavish conviction. The
paradox of The Marble Faun is that it’s the most nihilistic of Hawthorne’s
books at the same time as it’s the warmest and most sympathetic, due to his
enriched background and delving in different genres. The characters work their
way towards each other through their worst encounters with desolation and self-
doubt. Everyone in The Marble Faun becomes lost, wandering in destructive
and hopeless alienation. Each character suffers from an insatiable instinct that
demands friendship, love, and intimate communication. The novel offers no
easy hope, no simple consolation. Miriam never escapes her guilt. Donatello
goes to prison. Hilda’s doubts about her innocence and the darkness of the
world stay with her forever. Yet the final paradox is that all the characters come
together in their loneliness, and are united in their separation. They still have
problems, but they know this about each other, and they do their best to see
beyond their individual tragedies and to share whatever comfort they can.
Hawthorne loves them for this, and loves them for salvaging their humanity
even after they’ve been broken by their nightmarish personal failures, and by
the wild, irrational malevolence that haunts all the story’s events.
Marija Ilić