Pessimism In Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter

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Pesky Puritan Pessimism How can pessimism be used as a symbol? The Scarlet Letter is a tragic romance novel that takes place during the Puritan era. In the novel a woman names Hester Prynne, an adulteress, has a child with her Reverend. Her husband has been missing for many years and finally returns and creates complications all throughout Hester and her lover’s lives. The outcome of Hester’s sinful act with the Reverend is a beautiful child which she names Pearl. Although symbols have many different meanings, in Nathaniel Hawthorn’s The Scarlet Letter, symbols, especially the character Pearl, are used to show that old world pessimism is not part of the optimistic future of America. For Hester’s crime of adultery, she is forced to wear a scarlet letter for as long as she lives. The puritans, in this case, hope that the letter will make her feel remorse for her terrible sin. At first for Hester the letter is a constant reminder of her sin, but …show more content…

In another case, Hawthorne starts his novel off by talking about an old prison door “which gave a yet darker aspect to its beetle browned gloomy front” (Hawthorne 35). Hawthorne is using the prison door to represent the sin and gloom of the way of the puritans. The prison looks old and worn which makes it seem “more antique than anything else in the new world” (Hawthorne 35). This prison represents how the puritans’ ways are worthless in the new world. The reason Hawthorne describes the prison door this way is to show the old ways of the puritans or how the puritans’ ways will not be used in the new world. In brief the way of the puritans is useless for this new world they have created. Characters in the book, like Hester, are not realizing it, but they have already started to live in a different way than the puritans have been. Hawthorne wanted readers to realize how the old ways of the puritans will not work for the

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