The House and the Curse
Before the house stood in its present location on Pyncheon-street in "one of our New England towns," a more humble dwelling stood on the same spot. The street was then, in the early 17th century, known as Maule's Lane, for that humble house was occupied by one Matthew Maule, who was engaged in a dispute over ownership of the land with Colonel Pyncheon. Maule, in fact, designed the new house for Pyncheon. Their dispute over the property ended when Maule was executed on charges of witchcraft-at the Colonel's instigation. Tradition holds that Maule's last words, directed at Pyncheon from the scaffold, were, "God will give him blood to drink!" And, indeed, Pyncheon died a mysterious death not long after he took possession of Maule's Lane and built the House of Seven Gables: he was found inside his study, his face and clothes bloodied. Apparently, Maule's curse had come to fulfillment. Later rumors held that there were finger marks on Pyncheon's throat; or that a man had been seen escaping through the room's window; but the exact cause of his sudden death remained unexplained. (1)
The house of the seven gables is an obvious symbol of the declining Pyncheon fortunes, but it also stands as a more general warning against the dangers of becoming too embedded in the past. Holgrave repudiates the connection of family and property when he explains that true political freedom lies in the ability of each successive generation to tear down the old structures and replace them with its own. When Clifford flees the scene of the Judge’s death and gets his first taste of freedom on the train, he validates this viewpoint by characterizing the house as a dungeon from which he has escaped and touting the railroad as an invention that will bring humanity back to its original nomadic state. Although the novel concludes with its protagonists finding comfort within the walls of the Judge’s country estate, the house of the seven gables lingers as a testament to the incarceration of the human spirit. (Note that the Judge himself is described as a mansion soured by a rotting corpse buried somewhere in its walls.)