The Truth Shall Set You Free: The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorn

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Every action reaps its consequences. This veracity is revealed in Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter, published by Ticknor, Reed, and Fields in 1850. Categorized into the genre of romance, The Scarlet Letter has a solemn, dark, mysterious, and almost eerie mood. The historical novel is set in the strict Puritan society of seventeenth century Boston, Massachusetts. When the book begins, the past action of adultery has already been committed. The story then follows the characters involved in the dirty deed and skillfully details their responses to the consequences.

The characters Hawthorne develops are deep, unique, and difficult to genuinely understand. Young, tall, and beautiful Hester Prynne is the central protagonist of this story. Shamefully, strong-willed and independent Hester is the bearer of the scarlet letter. Burning with emotion, she longs for an escape from her mark, yet simultaneously, she refuses to seem defeated by society’s punishment. Reverend Arthur Dimmesdale claims the secondary role in The Scarlet Letter; he is secretly Hester’s partner in adultery. Conflicted and grieved over his undisclosed act, he drives himself to physical and mental sickness. He fervently desires Hester, but should he risk his godly reputation by revealing the truth? Dimmesdale burns like Hester. Pearl, the child produced in Hester and Dimmesdale’s sin, is the third main character. She is fiery, passionate, perceiving, and strikingly symbolic; at one point in the novel she is referred to as “the scarlet letter endowed with life!” Inevitably, Pearl is consumed with questions about herself, her mother, and Dimmesdale. The reader follows Pearl as she discovers the truth. Altogether, Hawthorne’s use of intricately complex, conflicted ch...

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...giveness is nowhere mentioned in the novel. Dimmesdale, who is a Puritan, at least in name, dies because he knows he is condemned. He attempts to escape his guilt, but because he ultimately remains religious, he is overwhelmed with his burden, and it kills him, both physically and spiritually. On the contrary, Hester lives because she believes she is free. However, her bliss is based in ignorance and pride. She refuses to realize that she, too, will inevitably face death and judgment. Dimmesdale’s melancholy death is based in partial ignorance. He admits to the reality of his condemnation, but he unfortunately does not realize that he can be forgiven and restored. In short, true happiness is not found in ignorance, but in the truth of forgiveness through Christ. Lamentably, Nathaniel Hawthorne’s complex themes in The Scarlet Letter have led countless readers astray.

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