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Hester Prynne Sinner Essay

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Hester Prynne Sinner and Saint
Nathaniel Hawthorne portrays Hester Prynne as both a sinner and a saint in order to show the possibility of redemption. Hester is shown as a sinner because she and Dimmesdale committed adultery. She is also shown as a saint because even though she was outcast by everyone in the puritan community, she continued to using her skills for the good of everyone in the community. First Hester is outcast as a sinner because she committed adultery. In the puritan society, this sin was grounds for execution, but in Hester’s case, her punishment was only that she must wear a letter “A” over her heart for the rest of her life in the town and she must face public shaming at the scaffold. Though Hester’s sin was regarded very seriously by the puritans, Hawthorne regards to her sin as a sin of passion. He regards to her sin as less than that of Chillingworth and Dimmesdale, because she admitted to her sin and faced her punishment. She also did not commit her sin deliberately, in order to cause someone else pain. Hester’s sin was committed because she put her love and passion before her puritan beliefs. Though she did this she always fully accepted her punishment and always fully expressed her grief by wearing the scarlet letter. All this to say, Hester is definitely a sinner, adultery is a very heavy sin, as are all others. Everyone is a sinner, but sin mustn’t …show more content…

Being widowed and shunned by the rest of society and still being able to survive and live well, Hester was very able. The last meaningful the scarlet letter was “awe”. This was because by the end of the novel when Hester came back without Pearl, many looked up to her and seemed her for council because she had been through so much. Hester Prynne’s story was put in place by Hawthorne in order to show that no matter how great anyone's sin, that can always be redeemed in both the eyes of God and

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