Challenge and change are part of life. Many people, especially those with opinions, are easily disgusted with sharp things that can be seen as changing and challenging their thoughts and memories. Magic has always been a part of life, but sometimes magical life is handled by people trying to destroy. Society is built on tradition and revolution which challenges others. These seemingly unrelated ideas are summarized in the plot of Holgrave's plot and Nathaniel Hawthorne's novel "The House of Seven Gables".
The main character of Hawthorne, Holgrave, is thought to be one of the most interesting male characters of him. It is a completely different man from the faint Arthur Dimmesdale. In the tension between Pyncheons and Maules, class conflicts play an important role in The Seven of the Gables, and Holgrave is obviously from the background of workers. "I am not a gentleman of nature," he insisted on Hepzibah; "I did not live like a man" (2:45) he said that Boston and Salem Hawthorne was working at the customs office It was like a Brooke farmer who was encountered in Pier and who is proud of Hawthorne's participation. Holgrave is expected to be a spokesperson for democratization and social equality imagined by Brook farmers. In his past world history, the terms "women" and "ethnic groups" have "meaning" and give privileges, ideals and other rights to people with these rights.
Hawthorne puts Holgrave between male models represented by Clifford and Jaffrey Pyncheon, and as a man, you can combine two extremes with the male temperament that fuses with a woman. Holgrave comes from work and entrepreneurial spirit, adolescent manhood, but he is domesticated in the process of the novel so that he can occupy a pleasant position at home. He refuses to act on Phoebe's threat and claims that his position as Maule claims to need to break down the cycle of exploitation and violence that began many years ago and is determined by historical fate It made it possible to replace the result of the story. I repeat. Holgrave refused to invite Phoebe through art to look forward to Coveredale and Kenyon. And they gave up more power to women. In fact, both Blithedale Romance and The Marble Faun not only read stories like Holgrave, there are also female characters who write their own stories.