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How Is Diction Used In The Scarlet Letter

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Hawthorne uses diction and similes of darkness to depict Hester's reputation in a Puritan society. Hester and Pearl converse with Dimmesdale in the forest when suddenly, Hester removes the scarlet letter from her chest. Pearl, who has never witnessed her mother without the scarlet letter, forces her to put the scarlet letter back on. The narrator describes, "her beauty, the warmth and richness of her womanhood, departed, like fading sunshine; and a grey shadow seemed to fall across her" (Hawthorne 166). Hawthorne uses a simile to compare Hester's beauty to fading sunshine. This further shows how Puritan judgement has diminished her beauty and spirit throughout the past seven years. When Hawthorne uses the words “grey shadow” it suggests when …show more content…

Wherever Hester is victimized with dirty looks or insults. from the other Puritans. They view the scarlet letter as her dark identity. Hawthorne describes it as, "but was red-hot with infernal fire, and could be seen glowing all alight, whenever Hester Prynne walked abroad in the nighttime" (Hawthorne 40). Hawthorn uses intense diction, "red-hot," "internal fire," and "glowing," to emphasize the influence the scarlet letter has regarding Hester's identity and reputation. The burden that the scarlet letter places on Hester shows her everlasting battle with sin in the Puritan society. Yet, the Puritans seemed to be more fascinated with on its striking qualities rather than the true representation of the letter. The scarlet letter is supposed to represent shame, but as Hester evolves the symbol of the letter becomes an emblem of strength. One writer criticizes Hester's transformation by saying, “Hester’s rise takes her from low on the line of moral value, a ‘scarlet woman’ guilty of a sin black in the eyes of the Puritans, as she becomes a sister of mercy and light” (Waggoner

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