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Puritan Characterism In Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter

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Hawthorne is not proud of his Puritan ancestry. His grandfather was a judge in the witch trials, the only one to not admit that the people burned might not have been witches. Going as far to change his name Hawthorne clearly did not like the ideals of the puritans. There is a good amount of evidence leaning towards Hawthorne writing a critique and commentary on the Puritanical society of the time. Hawthorne is presenting a narrative about how the society around his characters is corrupt. Hawthorne does not present Hester as evil, but works against what ideas were held at the time, he portrays Pearl as a normal child and not a demon, and many of the characters in The Scarlet Letter had views that were radical for the time. Many of …show more content…

As the narrator illustrates, “Hester bestowed all her superfluous means in charity, on wretches less miserable than herself, and who not unfrequently insulted the hand that fed them” ( Hawthorne 87). This shows that even after she is condemned and cast out by those around her, Hester still tries to help in some way, which once again goes against the idea of her being evil. Lastly, Hester is given an option to be free of her red letter, this is when all of Hawthorne’s previous points about her come to head. Despite being given the option to free herself, Hester decides to keep the “A,” stating that only God can forgive her. This action demonstrates that Hester defines her life through her actions after her branding, rather than letting one misdeed rule her life. Hawthorne makes it a point to comment on Hester’s role in society as a publicly shamed sinner, and he goes further to emphasize how products of such sins are viewed by society. More specifically, Hawthorne discusses the consequences that children born out of adultery face because of a judgmental society. Hawthorne challenges such judgement by writing: We have as yet hardly spoken of the infant that little creature, whose innocent life had sprung, by the inscrutable decree of Providence, a lovely and immortal flower ...as she watched the growth, and the beauty that became every day more brilliant, and the intelligence that threw its

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