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What Does The Rosebush Symbolize In The Scarlet Letter

Decent Essays

A product of sin and viewed as a child spawned from the devil, Pearl, Hester’s daughter as a result from an affair with Reverend Dimmesdale, is seen as immoral to the community of Boston. The young girl dances on the graves of those who have died and is infatuated with the scarlet letter her mother wears day in and day out, constantly asking her mother about the origins of the brightly colored fabric and going so far as to make her own letter out of green weeds found on the beach, actions the community deems wicked. However, Pearl has a special connection to nature, a link that allows readers to see Pearl in a whole new light, for the young girl forged from sin becomes one with nature when she is exposed to it’s essence. Pearl’s relationship …show more content…

During the scene involving the juxtaposition between the prison and rosebush, Hawthorne states, “it [the rosebush] may serve, let us hope, to symbolize some sweet moral blossom, that may be found along the track, or relieve the darkening close of a tale of human frailty and sorrow,” (Hawthorne 34). Furthermore, the rosebush is a symbol of hope. The thorny, red-petaled plant signifies the hope Hester holds and her aspiration to embed Pearl with that very form of hope. Since Pearl represents hope, as does the rosebush, it is only fitting that Pearl tends to gravitate towards the rosebush. When Pearl and her mother visit Governor Bellingham’s home, Pearl’s attention is drawn towards the rosebush that sits outside the Governor's extravagant residence. “Pearl, seeing the rose-bushes, began to cry for a red rose, and would not be pacified,” (73) is what is depicted once Pearl’s eyes lock with the delicate petals. Pearl screams out when her mother denies her the opportunity to go and pluck the rose, a scene that shows readers the connection Pearl has to nature. Facing scrutiny at the hands of the community on a daily basis, Pearl is drawn to the rose and nature as a whole because it is the only element in the world she lives in that does not rebuke her existence. Planted and rooted within the soil, the rosebush is a symbol of purity and the natural world, an environment Pearl longs to be …show more content…

As her mother waits for Dimmesdale to cross the forest floor, she urges Pearl to go and play while she has a serious talk with Dimmesdale. Once Hester and Dimmesdale discuss what needed to be said, they glance over at Pearl and a detailed account of her presence in the forest and with the animals in described by the narrator. “The small denizens of the wilderness hardly took pains to move out of her path,” (140) is what the narrator describes small animals to act in Pearl’s presence. In any other circumstance, whenever something large, like a predatory animal or human, is in the presence of small animals, they flee. However, this scene set in the forest shows readers that the small animals to do move when Pearl is around. The small woodland animals do not move out of Pearl’s path because they sense no harm or danger in the little girl. Unlike the community’s negatively abiding opinions about Pearl and her unusual behavior, the animals see Pearl as one of their own in a sense. The little creatures that scurry on the forest floor do not fear her presence and accept her as one of their own, a symbol that draws Pearl to her strong connection towards nature. Another instance occurs with a recount that a wolf came up to Pearl in the forest and, “...came up, and smelt of Pearl’s robe, and offered his savage head to be petted by her hand,”

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