The Marble Faun, novel by Nathaniel Hawthorne, published in 1860. It is one of the works Hawthorne called romances—“unrealistic” stories in exotic settings.
The central metaphor of The Marble Faun is a statue of a faun by Praxiteles that Hawthorne had seen in Rome. In the faun’s fusing of animal and human characteristics, Hawthorne found an allegory of the Christian concept of the Fall of Man. This theme, of humanity’s descent from amoral innocence to the knowledge of good and evil, often had been assumed in his earlier works but here received direct and philosophic treatment.
The faun of Hawthorne’s novel is Donatello, a passionate young Italian who makes the acquaintance of three artists who are spending time in Rome: Kenyon and Hilda, who are both from the United States, and Miriam, who, according to the novel’s narrator, “was plucked up out of a mystery, and had its roots still clinging to her.” When Donatello kills a man who has been shadowing Miriam, he is wracked by guilt until he is arrested by the police and imprisoned. Both Miriam and Hilda are also tainted by guilt.