From adultery to satanic children The Scarlet Letter has about every horrid possible outcome known to man. With all of the hate, discontent, trouble, toil, and strife someone says that once you go deeper into the readying there are several good thing. So among the hate for Hester and her child, among the doctor who was only keeping the priest alive for his own personal gain, among the priest living a lie for his own sake there is supposed good. I will find some but, I am telling you know that I personally do not agree. I believe that this book it meant to give of what happens when you do something you know is wrong, but I will not justify it for you, no sir, I will not believe most of what I wright.
There is one positive notion, you must bear with me for a moment and here me out, it will all make since in the end. Hester made it so that everyone stopped judging themselves and only judged her, yes all of the women no longer hated themselves for not being as beautiful as her. They pushed there hate at her instead of pulling it inward, there is a beauty in that statement, all of the women
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Page 47 "'Women, transgress not beyond the limits of heavens' mercy!' cried the Reverend Mr.Wilson, more harshly than before.'That little babe hath been gifted with a voice, to second and confirm the counsel which thou hast heard. Speak out the name! That, and thy repentance, may avail to take the scarlet letter off thy breast' 'Never' replied Hester Prynne." I could not believe this happened, Hester loved whom ever she made love to enough that when questioned about him and promised that she would not have to wear the scarlet letter any more she refused to give up the name. She refused to take freedom for fear of tarnishing the name of the man that she laid with, that is love. This shows that ever when you have nothing the only person you can trust is the on you love. She would not taint the name of her lover for any
Nathaniel Hawthorne’s novel, The Scarlet Letter, is a compassionate yet riveting piece of English literature that supports the movement for equality of suppressed women during a most tumultuous time during the 1800’s. Hawthorne’s use of emotional diction and imagery throughout his novel employs a deplorable tone upon the story. It serves as a stark representation of an imaginative yet realistic example of the indifference of men and women during these changing times. Deeply held Puritanical beliefs led countless of people to believe that individuals, especially women, who committed sins of any type would never reach heaven upon their passing. Men, on the other hand, were judged less severely if accused of a crime. Hester Prynne, the
Together with the transformation of Hester, the scarlet letter once again symbolizes her identity as pure as an angel. Though she committed adultery and had to suffer a lot from this sin, her soul still remains in an original shape of purity. And the red color of letter A on her bosom, which once was the call of scorn, hate and bitterness towards Hester, now attracted people's warmth, admiration and love as if it were a red burning color deep inside her heart. Hester deserves the highest recognition that the scarlet letter has done for her: a woman with a pure heart and soul of an angel.
out of your eye,’ when all the time there is a plank in your own eye? You hypocrite, first take
Symbolism, Sin, and The Scarlet Letter Symbolism supplies many authors with the ability to add greater impact and power to their literary work. This holds especially true for The Scarlet Letter, a novel written by Nathaniel Hawthorne. The Scarlet Letter holds within its pages many examples of symbolism, which provide for a more sophisticated and compelling plot than that of a simple novel. In The Scarlet Letter, symbolism exists as an important element utilized to reveal deeper meanings and ideas behind seemingly ordinary, hollow actions, objects, or people.
Scarlet Letter Paper In The Scarlet Letter, author Nathaniel Hawthorne examines the moral consequences of sin and how individuals can be redeemed through the themes of guilt, alienation, appearance vs. reality, and the breaking of societies rules. The two central characters in the novel, Hester Prynne and Arthur Dimmesdale, commit a sin, or an offense against religious or moral law, of adultery and the deal with their wrongdoing in opposite ways. Initially, it seems that Hester Prynne’s sin is worse than that of Reverend Dimmesdale because her sin is visible to all of society. Even though she becomes alienated by society, Hester uses her newfound independence due to her sin as strength and becomes a better person.
In the novel The Scarlet Letter I learned that Hester Pryne is accused of infidelity, in other words to be known as the action of being unfaithful to a spouse or other sexual partner considered an horrendous sin New England in the late 19th century. For a short period of time she is convicted to prison, while she is in prison she gives birth to her daughter. the baby crowns the glaring symbol of her misstep. The decision was made by the town and chief priest to painfully increase the consequences of her sin to the public and make sure everyone saw, also to teach lessons on many thing like morality. After all of this happens they force her to make an appearance in front of the public and is criticized to wear the Scarlet Letter “A” on her chest
After reading the Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne I came to believe that Adultery is a terrible thing and can have very bad repercussions, especially in the early to mid 1700s. Back then committing adultery was a very serious offense to not the just the community but to your family also. Adultery used to destroy family relationships and to this day it still does. Adultery is also more of a religious problem but also goes into social and legal consequences. When it talks about social consequences it is things like being exposed to the whole town and everyone knows what you did, things were very strict when it came to adultery. Not only were you exposed but because adultery was taking so seriously, whoever committed
Through out the course of history, those who were considered sinners were often out casted from the society. This is much the case with Hester Prynne in Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter. After a public trial, Hester is considered a sinner due to her birthing of a so called “devil child”. Hester is convicted to the life long bearing of a scarlet letter on her chest. The Scarlet Letter that Hester Prynne wears symbolizes the change in perception of sin through out the novel. Due to the revelations of the governor Winthrop and the reverend Dimmesdale, the way sin is perceived changes from one of shame to the idea that every one is a sinner in their own right.
“The happiness of the wicked passes away like a torrent!” This quote from Jean Baptiste Racin summarizes The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne in one sentence. The novel’s main focus is on three main characters and how the sins they commit affect their lives in the strict Puritan town of Boston around the year 1642. Hawthorne was very knowledgeable of his Puritan ancestry and shows it by incorporating some important thoughts and traditions into this story about sin and confession. Throughout the novel, the physical, social, mental and emotional changes that result from sin in the lives of the characters are never positive and the outcome of their spiritual battles are not always good; but the author makes it perfectly clear to us that concealing sin is not wise.
Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter is a classic American novel that tells a story of Hester Prynne, a convicted adulterer, and her struggles in community that has condemned her a sinner for life. Hawthorne uses the harsh social conditions of an early American Puritan society to create a backdrop for his new type of progressive woman character, Hester Prynne. Throughout the novel Hawthorne uses Hester as a way to break the societal norms presented by Puritan ideals, as well as emphasize their hypocrisy, strictness, and female inferiority standards. Despite such strict social constructs, Hester Prynne is able to eventually find peace with her sins and herself, despite being an outsider from her community. Hawthorne does this to emphasize the shortcomings of this society, as well as, to create a strong female character that defies everything this society was about.
In the Puritan day of old, adultery was heavily looked down upon and still is today. In Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter, Hester was permanently marked with the scarlet “A” because of her sin. As the book continued on, the view of the “A” and the meaning of it changed in the public’s eyes from adulterer to able.
Mentally, however, the community might not have been as pleased. The scarlet letter did not complete its work, and Hester's thoughts began to stray toward what they would possibly have labeled as evil, or heretical. In doing so, however, she found an abiding peace in herself and her child, if a hate for Puritan society. This
What Hawthorne describes in the first chapter in detail is the prison that was built. Starts of by describing the prisoners inside the prison mixed of women and men wearing sad colored and gray garments, some wearing hoods others beheaded. The door of the prison was described as being in front edifice, being made of oak and having iron spikes and the prison door was described as antique. Where the prison is located now use to be a glass plot which consists of overgrown Burdock, pigweed poisonous apples. The prison had a wild rose- bush which as the prisoners went in the prison they can smell the sweet scent and as prisoners meant there last moments they would come across the rose bush And would think I committed a horrible crime how can nature
For centuries, humans have sought to understand and control the chaotic nature of our incomprehensible planet. We seek to create structures that dictate chaos, and feel in command of our fleeting lives. Cities, governments, and constitutions are erected to provide the comforting idea that anything is within human control. Human nature, must be contained, so that morally undignified acts are avoided. But who is to decide what is morally "right" and what is "wrong?" The Scarlet Letter, by Nathaniel Hawthorne explores the restricting laws and hypocritical systems humans employ in an effort to contain and manipulate chaos, by using a Puritanical religion as a representation of a legalist civilization. The Scarlet letter takes place in Boston through the perspective of a Puritan society in the 17th Century, and focuses on the harsh punishment the town leaders give to Hester Prynne after her adultery is revealed. The novel explores the nature of secrets, the agony of guilt, and most importantly the role of society in chastising people for "unholy" acts. In it, Hawthorne exemplifies and exaggerates the harsh regiments of Puritan Society, emphasizing the human compulsion to break free from expected boundaries and the unsustainability of social constructs.
4. The Scarlet Letter sold well initially due to the excitement around the novel 's introduction, where Hawthorne attacked his political enemies