The Scarlet Letter Pearl Essay

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    daughter Pearl because she can teach Pearl what she learned from the letter and Pearl was given to her by God as a blessing and punishment. Pearl to Hester is her greatest joy and greatest lesson. Hester will use her scarlet letter as an important teaching for Pearl. Over all, it’s inhumane to rip apart a bond soas strong as one between a mother and very young daughter. Furthermore, Hester has stated that she can teach her “little girl” what she has learned from this. Hawthorne page . The scarlet letter

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    particular idea. This idea is generally one that the authors deem crucial to the understanding of the work of literature. Such a use of symbols is seen in Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter. In order to unlock the meaning of this work, readers must interpret two of his most prominent symbols, the scarlet letter and Pearl.

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    A pearl is an object of immense value and tremendously precious to its beholder. Nathaniel Hawthorne, the author of The Scarlet Letter, uses this definition to create the character Pearl. Pearl, named because she was purchased with everything her mother had, is a complex and symbolic character in the novel (81). Because Pearl’s parents, Reverend Dimmsdale and Hester Prynne committed adultery, there was penance to be paid. Pearl is this price for Hester. Just like when beautiful pearls come from grotesque

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    In The Scarlet Letter, Pearl is often regarded as a symbol to that of the suffering of Hester Prynne and the shamed Reverend Arthur Dimmesdale but Pearls significance is more than just symbolizing the sin committed by her parents. She in many ways represents the innocence that the puritan belief is regressing itself to have. Hawthorne constructs Pearl as an evolving symbol for Hester and Dimmsdale and her progression as a character is shown through that of the actions set forth by these characters

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    Embodiment of Pearl The Scarlet Letter tells the story of Hester Prynne and her daughter, Pearl. Beginning in Puritan, Massachusetts Bay Colony around the 1640s, Hester is reprimanded by her community for the sin of adultery. Pearl, the physical product of Hester’s committed sin, is considered an outcast by her community as well. Although she inhabits a hostile, austere environment, Pearl is not constrained, unlike Hester, Chillingworth, and Dimmesdale are in Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter. Pearl

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    The Scarlet Letter tells the tale of a woman named Hester Prynne who has an illegitimate child, Pearl, with one of Boston’s well-known ministers, Arthur Dimmesdale. Set in Puritan New England in the 1700s, the environment encircles the Puritan beliefs as well as the Puritan government. Caught by the town when she starts to show, Hester is sentenced to prison time and public humiliation for her adultery. As she raises Pearl she encounters her eccentric behavior and wild actions in stride as she has

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    Pearl: The Elf-child Generally, the more characters a book has, the more challenging it is for a writer to create a well-organized interaction between book’s characters. For this reason, the author thinks twice before adding a new personality into the story. Thus, for a character to become a part of the book, his or her existence has to be justified. In other words, a character has to earn his place in the story. There is no doubt that Pearl earns her place in Nathaniel Hawthorne’s book “The Scarlet

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    story Pearl is described as “so intelligent, yet inexplicable, perverse, sometimes so malicious…” (Hawthorne 61). Even though Hester does see positive traits about Pearl, she can easily see her negative traits more; they are all very obvious to Hester. The use of juxtaposition shows that Pearl is the product of a mistake and not only will Hester be punished by the scarlet letter, but she will constantly remind of her poor actions through Pearl’s behavior. Also, the very first thing that Pearl noticed

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    opens with Hester calling Pearl, Pearl stands on the other side of the brook refusing to cross. Hester believes it is because of the scarlet letter missing from her bosom, she was right. Pearl’s reaction to her mother without the scarlet letter did not surprise me but left me to question Pearl as a person. Why does Pearl have such a connection with the scarlet letter? Why wouldn’t she come when her mom called her without it on? When Hester put the scarlet letter back on Pearl comes over and kisses Hester

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    about the next two. Hester and Pearl are on the scaffold alone, waiting for the town to ridicule them. Hester starts daydreaming while in the scaffold because she doesn’t want anyone to see how she is truly feeling. She doesn’t want the sympathy of anyone in the town. She wears her Scarlet A on her chest which she has embroidered magnificently, but she does not want anyone to see it. So she tries to place Pearl over it as a means to hide it. But as Pearl is a Scarlet Letter herself all she does is draw

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