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Scarlet Letter Essay: The Puritan Justice System

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The Puritan Justice System “But he that doeth wrong shall receive for the wrong which he hath done: and there is no respect of persons” (Col. 3:25). In seventeenth-century New England, the Puritans strongly believed in public punishment and judgment for all sins. In The Scarlet Letter, the punishment assigned to the people who break God’s law seems harsh; however, what was this punishment like in comparison with the acceptable punishment of that day?
In the 1600’s, the New England Puritans were strict enforcers of God’s law. Those who enforced the laws and those who interpreted the laws were often one and the same person. The religious rulers of that time often maintained an impossibly high standard with serious consequences for offenders. …show more content…

“In June of 1645, the General Court passed an act that outlined the punishment for fornication. Every person who committed fornication ‘before or without lawfull contract’ was to be imprisoned for up to three days and either whipped or fined ten pounds” (Lauria). Although this seems harsh, this law actually revoked a previous law that allowed for execution of the guilty parties. In 1641, Mary Latham and James Britton both were convicted of adultery and were executed. Britton had contracted a serious disease which he felt was God’s judgment for his sin. Overwhelmed by his guilt and afraid of the further judgment of God, he confessed his and Mary’s sin to the magistrates. Initially, Mary denied the accusations; however, after she was tried and convicted she admitted to the deed and revealed the names of several other men with whom she had also been involved with. Both sodomy and “buggery” were also strictly forbidden. “In 1642, Edward Preston was sentenced to be publicly whipped at both Plymouth and Barnstable ‘for his lewd practices tending to sodomy with Edward Mitchell, and pressing John Keene thereunto (if he would have yielded)’” (Cox). A young man who was convicted of “buggery” - bestiality - was hung for his offense and all the animals put to death, just as the Bible …show more content…

When she meets an unearthly young minister, they are attracted to each other and eventually succumb to adultery. When Hester, the young lady, becomes pregnant she is charged with adultery. Her punishments include: public humiliation on the scaffolds, imprisonment, and wearing a scarlet “A” on the outside of her garments forever. A similar story that Hawthorne might have based his tale on was the story of Mary Bailey. Mary immigrated to Maine and married a local fisherman. After his unexpected death, she became a live-in housekeeper for an elderly minister. The Puritan townspeople, who hated this certain minister because of his “liberal” ways, accused the minister and Mary of living improperly together. Attempting to quell the rising accusations, the minister told the townspeople he and Mary married secretly. Mary continued in the minister’s house, but became involved with a neighbor. Their affair became public when she became pregnant with her neighbor’s child in 1651. Mary was sentenced to thirty-nine stripes, and six weeks after delivery, she was to be branded with an

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