Sacrifice In Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter

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In The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne, Hester Prynne, the protagonist of the novel, sacrifices her opportunity to escape the punishment of adultery. Her sacrifice illuminates her value of power, acceptance, and strength and further help establish the meaning of the novel.

Once Hester Prime is labeled as a person who has committed adultery, she chooses to remain in Massachusetts Bay Colony and suffer her punishment. The townspeople that govern The Colony even gave her the decision to allow Hester to remove the a that she wears on her chest. However, Hester sacrifices both opportunities to escape her sin. By refusing to escape the colony and take off The Scarlet Letter, Hester shows that she will not allow her Society to exert power over her and determine who she is. Instead, Hester sacrifices highlight her value of power and that she, alone, has the power to create her identity. Though she is secluded from the rest of the inhabitants of the colonies she empowers herself to provide clothing and food for the poor she cares about. …show more content…

By remaining amongst the society that has banished her, Hester shows her acceptance, rather than rejection, of sin. But becoming a woman who is banished yet part of her Society, Hester's put in a position that no other in her Society has been. This position allows her to remain secluded as she wants and at the same time observe the society around her. Hester also accepts not only her sin and punishment but the source of both her daughter Pearl. By accepting Pearl, Hester for further clarifies that she's accepted her sin and is determined to live with it, which is reflected by her becoming a nurturing mother to

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