Sin And Guilt In The Custom House, By Nathaniel Hawthorne

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Like other Dark Romanticists, Hawthorne often portrayed through their characters the psychological effects of sin and guilt on the human mind. Hawthorne’s ancestors held prominent positions in Salem in the seventeenth century. Major William Hathorne persecuted Quakers, and his great-great grandfather, Justice John Hathorne, served as a judge during the Salem witch trials. Hawthorne went as far as to add a “w” to his name to separate himself from his ancestors, although he held their memory close to him. In The Custom-House, Hawthorne claims he has inherited the “strong traits of their nature [which]...intertwined themselves” with his own. He spent much time after Bowdoin college studying the history of his home-town by “[drawing] from the