preview

What Does The Prison Door Symbolize In The Scarlet Letter

Decent Essays

The author of The Scarlet Letter, Nathaniel Hawthorne, wrote this brilliant, and cognitive novel, not only in the literal sense, but also symbolically to thoroughly spread his strong direct opinions into the minds of readers. The purpose of using symbolism rather than telling the audience how something is connected to another, is to intrigue the reader to metaphorically read between the lines and look for the much deeper denotation throughout Hawthorne's book. Utilizing roses, a prison door, sunshine, and the forest to portray deeper, more profound thoughts.
The prison door conveys an exceptional image of the Puritanical austerity of the law.
Hawthorne describes the prison door in The Scarlet Letter as old, and rusted, yet strong and sturdy with a "door of which was heavily timbered with oak, and studded with iron spikes" (41). This is representative of how the Puritanical laws have a powerful grasp on society, and how it is able to still be administered forcefully. This quote also symbolizes that there is an incapability to break away from the management of Puritan law. Another aspect the passage utilizes is that the Puritans have no toleration of irregularity. The narrator describes the prison door as never having known "a youthful era,", or innocence (41). Only 15 or 20 years after it was built, it's already "marked with weather-stains and other indications of age" (41); it has a "beetle-browed and gloomy front" (41); and in front of it is a weedy plot of grass with lovely sounding plants such as "burdock, …show more content…

All four of these major points are also used as symbols, although these are the main examples of symbolism, these are only a few of the many examples that Hawthorne uses in the book. Hawthorne used these examples of symbolism to encourage them to create opinions of their own. This book has turned out to be a wondrous adventure created within the text and into the mind of the reader because

Get Access