Hester is a seamstress in the new American town, Boston, She is a mother of her child Pearl who she conceived through adultery. She refuses to tell who her secret lover is and is then forced to wear a large, vibrant scarlet letter "A" on her chest. She is used as an example for the Puritan people on what will happen if they were to sin. This later causes her to realize that she is strong and compassionate. She cares for her child Pearl and lives in a small cottage on the edge of town. After her sin and punishment, she seems to lead a life of uneventfulness. Hester's state of mind is initially visible when she leaves the prison in the beginning of the story. When Hester emerges on chapter 2, her initial reaction is to hold little Pearl up to
Many times, a wrongdoing cannot be made right, but the only option is to accept the consequences and move on. In The Scarlet Letter, Hester accepts the consequences of her wrongdoing. Hester bears a letter A for being adulterous, but Hester does love Dimmesdale, so she does not repent for what she did, because her consequence is a result of her true love for Dimmesdale. In comparison to Hester, Crane loves for the wrong reasons. In "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow," even after Crane doesn't obtain his objective of marrying Katrina, he doesn't have remorse and spreads his story around town.
In the novel, The Scarlet Letter, written by Nathaniel Hawthorne, there are three people whose sinful acts lead to their own destruction. When Hester Prynne’s husband was missing she committed adultery and had to wear a Scarlet Letter as a punishment. The man who helped Hester conceive a child through sin was Arthur Dimmesdale, who secretly carried the guilt with him through his life hoping to save his good reputation. Roger Chillingworth, a doctor, who did not want to have the title of Hester’s husband once he discovered her sin. He had began to seek revenge on Mr. Dimmesdale.
First of all, the scarlet letter stands for Hester's sin. By forcing Hester to wear the letter A on her bosom, the Puritan community not only punishes this weak young woman for her adultery but labels her identity as an adulteress and immoral human being as well. "Thus the young and the pure would be taught to look at her, with the letter flaming on her chest", also "as the figure, the body and the reality of sin." And the day Hester began to wear the scarlet A on her bosom is the opening of her darkness. From that moment, people, who look at her, must notice the letter A manifest itself in the red color covering not only her bosom, but her own character. The Puritans now only see the letter A, the representation of sin, scorn and hate
"Ironically, we were studying ‘The Scarlet Letter,’ but isn’t that always the way with these teenage tales? The literature you read in class always seems to have a strong connection with whatever angsty adolescent drama is being recounted.” Olive Penderghast, like Hester Prynne, was ostracized, however, rather than an act of adultery the social humiliation began from a little white lie she told her friend. Throughout Easy A, we see Olive is ostracized from her peers in high school socially similarly to how Hester is publicly humiliated by the townspeople who thought very lowly of her.
She takes Pearl to the governor house to try and convince them that she is able to raise her own child. Hester is constantly struggling with the guilt of her sins, but she is not hated by everyone “ Ah, but, interposed, more softly, a young wife, holding a child by the hand, let her cover the mark as she will, the pang of it will be always in her heart." (Hawthorne 90). Furthermore, not everyone wants to see Hester burn at the stake for her sins. Therefore, this allows Hester to be spared by the magistrate and only have to wear a scarlet “A” on her chest.
The Scarlet Letter is about a woman named Hester Prim that has an adulterous affair and has a baby so the colony makes her wear a scarlet letter A on her clothing. Hester keeps the baby daddy a secret. They made Hester stand on a pillory platform which is a device used for locking people up in public.
In The Scarlet Letter, Hester wears the scarlet letter as a sign of shame for committing adultery when her husband was lost at sea. By wearing the scarlet letter, Hester shows that she accepts the sin that she has committed. Even after Chillingworth allows Hester to remove the scarlet letter, Hester still wears the scarlet letter. By continuing to wear the scarlet letter, Hester accepts the scarlet letter as her reminder of her sin. Through her reflection of her sin with the scarlet letter, Hester changes and becomes more strong, honest, and kind. Hester exhibits strength when she persists to keep her oath of Pearl’s father, and when she
In a famous novel called The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne, Hester Prynne receives many criticisms for being portrayed as a pure character. Among those criticisms, literary critic D. H. Lawrence provides a powerful and reasonable explanation to why Hester Prynne does not deserve such admiration. Additionally, Lawrence facilitates his viewpoints by arguing that Hester Prynne is the cause for the sin of adultery. D. H. Lawrence applies precise diction, biblical allusion, and dramatic verbal irony in his essay to emphasize Hester Prynne as the character who should be recognized for her offense.
When most people think of the Middle Ages or medieval times, they think of grand castles, fearless knights, menacing kings, dashing lords, elegant ladies, and the acclaimed act of chivalry. However, there is a lot more to this prominent age than most people may think. According to the document, Feudalism and the Manorialism by Onondaga Central School Community, the manorial system of the time by which vassals pledged their loyalty and military support to their lords in return for this land is truly one to rave about! The lords who owned land split it and gave portions of land to the vassals. In return, these vassals had to pledge for their lords and offer help to them in times of need.
Hester Prynne, the main character of the book, is made to wear a scarlet letter “A” because she committed adultery. The people of the town cast it on her to humiliate her and shame her for her actions and to identify her as a sinner. Even though Hester could’ve escaped Boston and be rid of the letter, she chose to stay in a secluded cottage with her daughter, Pearl. She does not leave because she does not want to be suppressed by society’s identification of her.
While her husband was doing his business in England, Hester has an affair with a man of her age, Arthur Dimmesdale. She has a baby that she called Pearl, but it obviously becomes public, and soon the whole city knows it. The unfair woman is exposed on a scaffold in her city so she is ashamed of what she did and to warn people
I think it can be said that Hawthorne, for his time, took a mostly pro-feminism stance in The Scarlet Letter, as he made his lead character a female who not only survives, but ultimately thrives in, a society in which she socially does not belong.
Hester Prynne is a unique character in the novel The Scarlet Letter. She is a unique character because she was a strong, independent, and honest woman. In Chapter 4 when Roger Chillingworth, her husband, was having an altercation with Hester about whom she cheated on him with, Chillingworth tells Hester, "Thou wilt not reveal his name? “ (Hawthorne, 1850, pg. 65), were Hester replies, after some time of Roger trying to evade it out of her, “‘I will keep thy secret, as I have his,’ said Hester.”
Day of the dead is the best way to honor the dead. Or at least I think is what’s better than having a giant cookout and dressing up to rember your loved ones and having a good time and getting together that’s why I think it’s really cool how they honor to dead. To be blasphemous. The pre-Hispanic people were considered barbaric and pagan. So in the Spaniards attempts to convert them to Catholicism the ritual was attempted to be vanished. However they failed and the Day of the Dead rituals lived on.
People who live for themselves and abandon the rigid expectations of society can face even the harshest judgments with poise and confidence. Hester presents herself to society on her day of punishment with a “haughty smile,” and more importantly, a “scarlet letter A,” complete with “elaborate embroidery,” “fantastic flourish,” “gorgeous luxuriance,” and great “[artistry],” which highlights her defiance of society’s hypocritical moral standards (Hawthorne 40). Hester disregards the opinions of society, and remembers always her own thoughts about her actions. People with the highest levels of moral development create personal morals which consider circumstance and their own values and thoughts. They do not rely on the ideals and beliefs of society in order to determine right or wrong, and truly analyze the reasons and motivations for actions rather than simply the actions themselves.