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How Does Nathaniel Hawthorne Use Supernatural Elements In The Scarlet Letter

Decent Essays

In the ninth through eighteenth chapters of Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter, many things are established. The characters in the novel are beginning to be fully characterized, Pearl is described as “elvish” and to have an “elf-smile in her eyes” and at such a young age Pearl displays a supernatural intelligence that most three year-old’s do not possess. Pearl is a living example representing the sin of adultery that Hester Prynne, her mother, has committed, which connects to the theme. Pearl is very much alike her mother Hester, because of their captivating beauty. Another character development is the evolution of Reverend Arthur Dimmesdale’s illness. Dimmesdale becomes extremely ill, and he punishes himself because of the sin he committed which was also adultery, with Hester Prynne. Dimmesdale slowly begins to attempt to reveal his sinfulness through his sermons, but this leads his congregation to believe he is very holy and could never be a sinful being. Hawthorne uses dramatic irony, through this situation because the reader knows who the father of Pearl is and that Dimmesdale committed adultery, but the people of the …show more content…

Pearl’s intelligence is described as “preternatural”, because of her young age and her possession of such intelligence which is abnormal as a three year-old. Roger Chillingworth’s evil transformation can be described as supernatural, as he is compared to the devil after his discovery on Dimmesdale’s chest. The reader may assume that there is a Scarlet Letter “A” on his chest is exemplifying his sin of adultery. Before Chillingworth makes his discovery on Dimmesdale, in the beginning of his commitment to assist Dimmesdale while he is ill, the townspeople were split in their opinions over if Chillingworth was spawn of the black man in the forest with dangerous motives or simply a kind

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