What Does Darkness Symbolize In The Scarlet Letter

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Nathaniel Hawthorne embodies the idea of goodness within humanity inevitably finding a way to overcome evil through his novel, The Scarlet Letter. The story is set in early Puritan Massachusetts, where Hester Prynne, the protagonist of the novel, is burdened with having to wear a scarlet letter “A” upon her chest for the rest of her life after she committed adultery with Reverend Dimmesdale, the beloved town pastor, who also must endure the burden of keeping his sin a secret. Although the bleak Puritan society creates a dreary image, a rosebush is able to grow amidst the dreary Puritan society, indicating Hawthorne’s belief that truth can not be suppressed. Through contrasting symbolic imagery that depicts the Puritan society’s attempts to …show more content…

Hester and Dimmesdale are not free within their Puritan society to express their passion for each other, and so must resort to the forest as a sanctuary for truth to be revealed. When Hester meets Dimmesdale in the forest, she tosses away her scarlet letter and uncaps her rich hair, at which “forth burst the sunshine, pouring a very flood into the obscure forest,” and the light is “gleaming adown the gray trunks for the solemn trees” (Hawthorne ). Hawthorne uses the term “solemn trees” throughout the novel to represent the stern, melancholy nature of the Puritan elders, and their reluctance to change their ways. The imagery of dawn cutting through the darkness of night and shining upon the solemn trees allows Hawthorne to assert how the light of truth emerges from darkness, and how it will unveil all unpleasant aspects of the Puritan culture as it had with the forest. The imagery of dawn inevitably rising symbolizes how truth will always outshine the darkness within the Puritan society, and Hawthorne consequently stresses the point that goodness within humanity will always prevail against malevolence. Through revealing how truth will burst free from within the overbearing wickedness of an oppressive society, Hawthorne further stresses how truth will always find a way to emerge from the evilness of human

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