Puritan Sovereignty In The Scarlet Letter

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During the seventeenth century, Puritan sovereignty had punished women for “sinful” actions such as adultery. In Nathaniel Hawthorne's novel, The Scarlet Letter , a rose bush symbolizes hope, perseverance, and willingness for Hester Prynne and her daughter Pearl, while they are viewed as outcasts in society. The judgement of the town helps them recognize strengths to move forward from Hester's sins. As Pearl receives hatred from being born of a sin, Hester is able to acknowledge the beauty within. For many years, people came to and from the prison and for every year, the lively rosebush acquired hope as it, “[offered] fragrance and fragile beauty to the prisoner” (42). Although the sorrow amongst the tracks of each prisoner overshadowed the …show more content…

With this determination, she, as well as many others were able to discover, the wonderful talent within Hester’s needlework. Occasionally, women with such despair would not appeal to the . While time progressed, Pearl being a young child with no knowledge of what she was born from, gave faith to her mother. A sin, for which not only has a “man marked this woman’s sin by a scarlet letter” but “ [gave] her a lovely child”(79). For in the “secret spell of her existence”(87) the rose bush is a hint of liveliness for the growth in humanity. While acknowledging Pearl, a child so innocent, gives an admiration of hope by reflecting on the liveliness that has existed. But with such hatred, the admiration, becomes destruction as “Peal sees the rosebush, begins to cry for a red rose, and would not be pacified” (95). Overall, The Scarlet Letter, gave Hester the ability to reflect upon the many thoughts and opinion women in history might have faced. Through the novel, Hawthorne gave each character acts of perseverance which allowed them to proceed from indirect judgement. Being a trouble women with a child born of a sin, availed for Hester, as she pushed forward from the

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