Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter

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Nathaniel Hawthorne was an American writer in the 1800s. He had many works of Romanticism, most being inspired by Puritan New England. One of these is The Scarlet Letter, which he wrote based on the Puritan era. Puritans had a series of beliefs including: the will of God explains all natural phenomena, God chooses who becomes one of the elect, and ministers and church members control and made up the government. Hawthorn does include examples of Romanticism as the story goes on, but this novel focuses more on the Puritan lifestyle throughout the timeline of the story. Hawthorne also includes a bit of sarcasm when mentioning the Puritan’s beliefs.
Hawthorne includes examples of God throughout this novel. When Hester is asking Bellingham and Wilson to let her keep Pearl, she begs, " ‘God gave me the child!’ " (Hawthorne 51). She uses their beliefs against them to try to prove her point. She felt that God would not have granted her Pearl if she was not worthy. Bellingham then orders Wilson, “ ‘... examine this Pearl... and see whether she hath had such Christian nurture as befits a child of her age.’ " Mr. Wilson goes on to ask her, “ ‘Canst thou tell me, my child, who made thee?’ " (Hawthorne 50). Pearl told them that she was picked from a rosebush. This shocked them because most children knew they came from God because that is what parents taught their children. Hawthorn shows their beliefs through the actions of the ministers and governors who God chose.
God chose what the elect consisted of in this time period and Hawthorne uses many examples of this belief. The townspeople of Boston looked up to Dimmesdale as if he was God himself, as one man tells Chillingworth, “ ‘... in godly Master Dimmesdale's church.’ ” (Hawth...

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...ticism because they were highly imaginative. Meteors can’t make a letter “A” in the sky, but Romantic writers favored imagination over reason. They also emphasized emotions, which Hester showed in The Scarlet Letter when she expresses her sorrow toward Chillingworth when she knows she has betrayed him and then again her love for Dimmesdale.
Despite Hawthorne’s claim that his book, The Scarlet Letter, is a work of Romanticism, this novel focuses more on the Puritanic lifestyle throughout the timeline of the story. Hawthorne includes examples of God, how God chose the elect, the ministers and church officials controlled the government, and blunt examples of the Puritan lifestyle. Hawthorn does include examples of Romanticism, but he includes many more examples of Puritanism. He tried to make his novel a work of Romantic writing, but it turned out to be more Puritan.

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