How Is Hester Prynne A Rebel

562 Words2 Pages

“The drama of Hester Prynne’s return has gone unappreciated, no doubt because it is absent from the novel. At a certain missing point in the narrative, through an unrecorded process of introspection, Hester abandons the high, sustained self-reliance by which we have come to identify her ...when she repels the beadle and walks proudly into the open air” (Bercovitch 576). When Hester Prynne, in the romantic novel The Scarlet Letter written by Nathaniel Hawthorne, receives her Scarlet Letter; she is immediately an outcast to her society. She is a quiet rebel who is isolated from society to get later on be given benefits for her own self. With the Scarlet Letter, Hester has gained this heroic independence and then abandons it to have a new life in the society where she was not needed/included in after her Scarlet Letter. Hester Prynne is a social rebellion and outcast who rebels against the government, nature, and herself; she is a rebel with a cause. …show more content…

Pearl is a wild, rebel of a child. She was the result of the Scarlet Letter that was given to Hester, but she loves her with all her heart. Hester demands to Governor Bellingham that “Ye shall not take her! I will die first!” (Hawthorne 76). This rebellion to the governor proves her love to her daughter Pearl and what she will do to keep that love. This demonstrates how rebellion is not always a bad effect because she fought for her love. If Hester did not do this, where would Pearl end up? Hester is a brave woman when it comes to people that she loves; especially with someone in a much higher position in society than her. We would never of thought that Hester would love her Scarlet Letter because that brought her to isolation of her own society. She loves her Scarlet Letter because it brought her love,

Open Document