Mr. Smooth-it-away

E794676

Mr. Smooth-it-away is a persuasive, worldly guide in Nathaniel Hawthorne’s allegorical tale "The Celestial Railroad," symbolizing deceptive ease and moral complacency on the path to salvation.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Mr. Smooth-it-away canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (37)

Predicate Object
instanceOf allegorical character
fictional character
symbolic figure
appearsAlongside the narrator of The Celestial Railroad
appearsIn The Celestial Railroad NERFINISHED
appearsInGenre allegory
short story
associatedWithTheme corruption of true pilgrimage
easy religion
false guides
hypocrisy
modern convenience versus spiritual discipline
basedOnOrAlludesTo characters in John Bunyan's The Pilgrim's Progress (allegorical parallel)
countryOfWorkOrigin United States NERFINISHED
createdBy Nathaniel Hawthorne NERFINISHED
firstPublicationContext The Celestial Railroad (1843) by Nathaniel Hawthorne NERFINISHED
hasTrait charming
complacent about morality
deceptive
persuasive
smooth-talking
worldly
languageOfWork English
literaryWorkAuthor Nathaniel Hawthorne NERFINISHED
moralAlignment morally dubious
spiritually dangerous
narrativeFunction to contrast with the difficult but sincere pilgrimage of Bunyan
to downplay spiritual danger
to entice the narrator onto the Celestial Railroad
roleInWork guide
tempter
settingContext the Celestial Railroad route to the Celestial City
symbolizes deceptive ease
false security on the path to salvation
moral complacency
spiritual deception
worldliness

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

The Celestial Railroad featuresCharacter Mr. Smooth-it-away