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"The Scarlet Letter"
An analysis of the "The Scarlet Letter", by Nathanial Hawthorne, and how the author's Puritan background is seen through the novel. -- 1,679 words; MLA

"The Scarlet Letter"
A paper which introduces, analyzes and discusses Nathaniel Hawthorne's story, "The Scarlet Letter". -- 961 words; MLA

"The Scarlet Letter"
A review of Nathaniel Hawthorne's novel, "The Scarlet Letter". -- 1,190 words;

"The Scarlet Letter"
A discussion of the strengths and weaknesses of Arthur Dimmesdalein Nathaniel Hawthorne's "The Scarlet Letter". -- 1,150 words;

"Madame Bovary" and "The Scarlet Letter"
A comparative analysis of the main themes of Gustave Flaubert's "Madame Bovary" and Nathaniel Hawthorne's "The Scarlet Letter". -- 2,019 words; MLA

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THE SCARLET LETTER

The Scarlet Letter, written by Nathaniel Hawthorne, is considered to be one of the
greatest examples of true
American literature. Its excellency of topic, characterization, and description has made
it a permanent part
of our history. Set in Salem, Massachusetts in the 1600s, it describes the life of Hester
Prynne, a Puritan
woman whose existence is marred by sin. The real genius of the book is found in its
description. Hawthorne
makes allusion, symbolism, and romanticism work toward one effect, making the reader feel
as if she was
there, watching it all happen, living through Hester's struggle.
The story opens as a woman, Hester Prynne, is leaving a jail and heading toward a large
scaffold in the
middle of Salem town, where she, along with her newborn child, Pearl, is put on display
as an example to all
the people, to discourage them from committing such a sin as adultery. The sentence is
given by a number
of priests who feel compassion for her because her husband had been thought dead for so
many years.
She is ordered to wear a scarlet letter, A for adultery, on her breast for the duration
of her stay in Salem.
She is perversely unwilling to leave the place of her shame and outcast when she could
easily have sailed
away to England or to anywhere else on earth and been rid of her mark of Cain. At the
scaffold, she sees
her husband, just arrived from Indian imprisonment, standing in the crowd. He, naturally,
is enraged by news
of her unfaithfulness to him and to his memory, but carries it too far when he renames
himself Roger
Chillingworth and begins slowly to dismantle the sanity of her lover, the Reverend Mr.
Arthur Dimmesdale.
Disguised as an apothecary, Chillingworth dwells with Dimmesdale, supposedly to maintain
his health, but
really to sap his strength and to serve as a reminder of the young reverend's sin. During
the seven-year
duration of the book, Hester becomes steadily stronger because of her mark, while
Dimmesdale, forced to
bear his brand internally, becomes very much incapacitated, both mentally and physically.
The face he puts
on for public approval and the one he wears while he is alone are so completely different
that they nearly
drive him insane. He is harder on himself for committing the sin than many a court of the
time would have
been, and it tears him apart. One day, he meets Hester and Pearl while walking through
the woods and,
after talking for a short while, they decide to leave Salem, to find a new life in the
more cultured, less ridged
society of the Old World. The day before they are to leave, Dimmesdale makes his last
speech to his
congregation. After the speech, as the people are walking away from the meeting house in
a parade, Arthur
turns to look at the scaffold, where he sees Hester and Pearl standing. He beckons them
toward him and
then he asks her to assist him up to the scaffold. She does so and there he announces his
sin to all the
town, there he rips off his shirt front so they can see imagination's and emotion's brand
on his chest, there
he collapses into Hester's arms, and there he dies. Hawthorne goes on to tell, in short,
the story of the rest
of Hester's life, tough most of it appears to be based on rumor. Chillingworth dies
within a year of
Dimmesdale, the object of his hatred and his motivation for living being gone, leaving
his fortune to Pearl.
She and Hester travel to Europe, where Pearl marries a member of the nobility, but then
returns to her old
house to live and counsel others in their times of pressing sorrow, and to bear the mark
of the scarlet letter
until she dies. She is laid to rest in death where she had been kept for the first seven
years of Pearl's life,
next to Arthur, yet unable to touch him, kept at a distance so their dusts wouldn't
mingle.
One of the best aspects of this book is its lack of superfluous events. Rather than tell
the reader about every
chance meeting between Hester and Arthur, he chooses only a few, well-spaced events to
portray their
entire relationship. The most vivid description in the book is one of these chance
meetings. Hester and
Pearl chance to meet Arthur at the scaffold late at night. He talks of how it is not
possible for them to stand
hand in hand in broad daylight, how he cannot claim them as his own until he is claimed
by God and they
stand trial together. Roger Chillingworth appears briefly, a shadowy, haunting figure on
the street, stealing
any pleasure they may have found in each other's company. The description is fantastic
mainly because of
the way one is able to picture the sky. A huge meteor flashes bright for a split second,
leaving a red letter A
behind it, lingering in the clouds. The moment is so breathtaking that one can hardly
believe that one is
reading this picture in words on a page, instead of really seeing it. As they speak, one
feels like one is
eavesdropping on a private conversation, and experiences pangs of guilt for viewing so
private a moment.
This description is the most vivid because of its absolute beauty of wording and of
subject matter. It
remains in one's mind long after one turns the page.
Feelings such that are unexpected for the modern day reader who expects to sympathize
rather than
empathize with the characters because of their differences of situation. A teenage
Baptist reader in
Danbury, Connecticut in 1996 expects to have little in common with a Puritan woman living
in Salem,
Massachusetts in the seventeenth century, however she finds marked similarities between
their situations.
These similarities can be explained by one simple thought, that people never change. We
all carry a mark
of wrongdoing, be it visible like Hester's A or a convict's tatoo, or be it internal,
like Arthur's guilt or a
schoolgirl's paranoia when she's snuck out of her house. These marks are less severe now,
however,
because of the impersonal attitude of many of the people around modern day readers. It
may be hard for
them to understand what it would be like to have an entire community breathing down your
neck, watching
you to save you from Hell. They also may take for granted the separation of church and
state which our
founding fathers so generously bestowed upon us two hundred years ago. Readers today
cannot
understand completely what it is like to have to use the Bible as a rulebook before God
as well as before
man.
The lesson to be learned from this novel is that one should not let the past ruin one's
future. Our mistakes
make us grow, if we deal with them and learn from them, as Hester did, but they can
mutilate our souls if we
refuse to own up to them to ourselves and to whomever else we ought, be they parents or
congregation
members. Hester managed to make herself a respected member of the community once more by
bearing
the letter with grace and dignity, and she became stronger emotionally at the same time,
strengthening
herself and her little elf-child. Arthur and Roger held their secret shame and bitterness
in, forcing themselves
to become completely different people. In the end, Hester was the only one who survived
the ordeal,
physically, socially, and emotionally. She kept her self-respect together, and that
proved to be the most
valuable asset of all. Hester was reminded of her sin every day, all of the time, by the
blaze of crimson upon
her chest, just as the reader is reminded of it every time she hears the title of the
book. It is not something
one can get away from, but it also isn't something which cannot be handled in some way.
The Scarlet Letter, by Nathaniel Hawthorne, is a classic piece of American literature. A
story about a
woman who is put through nearly unbearable circumstances, yet is resilient enough to
become even more
dignified than before, it appeals to the bravest part of everyone. Written by one of the
most skillful authors of
all time, it is a great example of how a reader can be dragged into the action and live
with the characters.
Yet even with all this action, The Scarlet Letter manages to teach its audience a lesson
in coping with life's
blows. Its clarity of thought and expression has captivated readers for over a century
and probably will
continue to do so for many years more.


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