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Color Imagery In The Scarlet Letter By Nathaniel Hawthorne

Decent Essays

Nathaniel Hawthorne is one of the greatest American novelist’s. While Hawthorne writes about various subjects and themes his major theme is alienation. He expresses this theme through a very complex particular style of writing. There are several elements that fall under Hawthorne’s belt of style. A few beautiful examples include his unparalleled use of symbolic color imagery and use of tone and mood to mirror the environment. Hawthorne uses these techniques to demonstrate a deep feeling of what nature brings out in man, and how evil effects the inside of the human mind focusing on the “dark” characteristics. From the first chapter in The Scarlet Letter Hawthorne conveys a very symbolic technique, color imagery. “A throng of bearded men, in sad-colored garments and gray steeple-crowned hats… assembled in front of a wooden edifice… between it… a grass-plot, much over-grown… in the soil that had so early …show more content…

Hawthorne is careful to depict this image representing the austerity of the situation in this Puritan community. The particular color black may represent satanic evil whereas white most commonly represents purity. Throughout the novel Hawthorne uses dim colors to symbolize Hester. Hester is an outcast, hidden away in the forest, and masks her true beauty and liveliness with dull gray garments. As she first appears out of the jail as “a black shadow” she is personally beginning to fade out of sight and she is only an outline of the woman she once was. Hawthorne takes advantage of using colors as part of his stylistic choice because it shows that these characters stand for a deeper and broader meaning. This can apply to the symbolic yet simple meaning of why the scarlet letter A is red. Red is the color for passion. Hester wears this mark on her chest out of passion, the daughter born from this passion is passionate and one with

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