"No man for any considerable period can wear one face to himself, and another to the multitude, without finally getting bewildered as to which may be the true"
About this Quote
The subtext is Puritan, but not preachy. Hawthorne’s world is saturated with surveillance, guilt, and the idea that the private self is always on trial. In that climate, duplicity is less a thrilling vice than a slow rot. He’s interested in what secrecy does to the soul, especially the kind of secrecy practiced for social survival: respectability over honesty, consensus over conscience. The “multitude” isn’t a handful of enemies; it’s everyone, the crowd whose approval quietly governs your choices.
Context matters: Hawthorne wrote in a 19th-century culture obsessed with moral character, reputation, and the visible signs of virtue. His fiction (The Scarlet Letter, “Young Goodman Brown”) keeps returning to the split between public piety and private desire. This sentence works because it refuses the comforting idea that you can cleanly separate the masks. Keep a double life long enough, and the masks don’t just slip - they fuse.
Quote Details
| Topic | Truth |
|---|---|
| Source | Later attribution: The Scarlet Letter (Nathaniel Hawthorne, 1893) modern compilationID: uLw-AAAAYAAJ
Evidence:
Nathaniel Hawthorne. professional career . " At least , they shall ... No man , for any considerable period , can wear one face to himself , and another to the multitude , without finally getting bewildered as to which may be the true ... |
| Cite |
Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Hawthorne, Nathaniel. (2026, March 29). No man for any considerable period can wear one face to himself, and another to the multitude, without finally getting bewildered as to which may be the true. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/no-man-for-any-considerable-period-can-wear-one-85343/
Chicago Style
Hawthorne, Nathaniel. "No man for any considerable period can wear one face to himself, and another to the multitude, without finally getting bewildered as to which may be the true." FixQuotes. March 29, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/no-man-for-any-considerable-period-can-wear-one-85343/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"No man for any considerable period can wear one face to himself, and another to the multitude, without finally getting bewildered as to which may be the true." FixQuotes, 29 Mar. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/no-man-for-any-considerable-period-can-wear-one-85343/. Accessed 29 Mar. 2026.











