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Essay/Term paper: Symbolism of the letter a throughout 'the scarlet letter'

Essay, term paper, research paper:  The Scarlet Letter

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Symbolism of the Letter A Throughout Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter

Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter includes many profound and important
symbols. This device of symbolism is portrayed well in the novel, especially through the
scarlet letter "A". The "A" is the best example because of the changes in the meaning
throughout the novel. In the beginning of the novel, the scarlet letter "A" is viewed as a
symbol of sin. The middle of the novel is a transition period, where the scarlet letter "A"
is viewed differently.
In the commencement of the novel, the letter is taken as a label of punishment and
sin. Hester Prynne bears the label of the letter upon her chest. She stands as a label of an
outcast in front of society. She is wearing this symbol to burden her with punishment
throughout her life. She stands on a plank where her punishment is given, "'Thus she will
be a living sermon against sin, until the ignominious letter be engraved upon her
tombstone'"(59). Society places its blames upon this woman. It is because of this one
letter that Hester's life is changed. The letter's meaning in Puritan society banishes her
from her normal life. The Puritans view this letter as a symbol of the devil. The letter also
put Hester through torture:
"Of an impulse and passionate nature. She had fortified herself to
encounter the stings and venomous stabs of public contumely wreaking
itself in every variety of insult but there was a quality so much more terrible
in the solemn mood of popular mind, that she longed rather to behold all
those rigid countenances contorted with scornful merriment and herself the
object"(54).
This implies that Hester's sin of bearing a child without the presence of a husband will
always be remembered.
In the middle of the novel is a transition period where the letter "A" is viewed
differently than before. In this section of the novel, Hester's appearance is altered to
where she is no longer seen as a person of sin. The letter changes from a symbol of sin to
a more vague symbol. Society now sees Hester as a person who is strong yet bears a
symbol which differs herself. At this point, Hester has learned to deal with the letter. She
has grown stronger from it; she is able to withstand the pressures of society. As she grow
stronger, her personality becomes more opposed to being seen as a sinner. The letter's
meaning has changed, "Hatred, by a gradual and quiet process, will even be transformed to
love, unless the change be impeded by a continually new irritation of the original feeling of
hostility"(147). This foreshadows the future events of the novel.
Another view of the letter is that it portrays guilt. It portrays the guilt of
Dimmesdale, the father of Hester's child. Hester has learned to deal with her punishment
and grow stronger from it, but Dimmesdale, who went unpunished and is a respectable
man in the Puritan society, must now live with the guilt of having a child "illegally". This
guilt helps him to become weaker as novel continues:
"Mr. Dimmesdale was overcome with a great horror of mind, as if the
universe were gazing at a scarlet token on his naked breast, right over his
heart. On that spot, in very truth, there was, and there long had been, the
gnawing and poisonous tooth of bodily pain"(136).
After seven years of torture caused by the scarlet letter, Hester tosses the letter
aside for an hour. The return of this letter, however, is beneficial to Hester. The letter's
refusal to be swept away, Pearl's refusal to join an unlettered Hester, and Dimmesdale
insistence that Hester do what ever it takes to quiet Pearl, force Hester to reaccept the
symbol of the sin she had wrongly divorced, and therefore allow Dimmesdale and Hester
to share a mutual public shame.
When Hester tosses her sin aside in the forest scene, she is not successful in
leaving her sin forever. "The mystic token alighted on the hither verge of the stream.
With a hand's breath further flight it would have fallen into the water, and have given the
little brook another woe to carry onward . . ." (pg. 185) The brook does not carry off
Hester's letter, and therefore, the disgrace of her sin is still close by. When Hawthorne says
that Hester's new thoughts "have taught her much amiss" (pg. 183) he also gives Hester
one last chance to reaccept the sin that she has committed and the Puritan Code which she
has so strongly rejected. By keeping the letter close at hand, Hester may still return to her
rightful place in shame.
Very much in tune with this letter is Pearl. Pearl immediately recognizes that the
letter has been cast aside, and recognizes that in a way she has been cast aside too. Pearl
has always been another symbol of the sin between Hester and Dimmesdale, as much, or
maybe more than the scarlet letter itself. When Hester removes the letter from her bosom,
in Pearl's eyes, she also removes her child. "At length, assuming a singular air of authority,
Pearl stretched out her hand . . . and pointing evidently towards her mother's breast. And
beneath, in the mirror of the brook, was the flower-girdled and sunny image of little Pearl,
pointing her small finger too." (pg. 191) This quote symbolizes the two aspects of Pearl
both commanding Hester to return the letter to her bosom. The elfish, disobedient Pearl
and the Pearl who creates beauty both point to their mother in a mixture of shock and
disgust. Pearl recognizes the fact that Hester can not toss her sin aside so lightly, and
makes Hester recognize that fact also.
Also worthy of note, is the fact that Pearl makes Hester pick up the letter and
reattach it herself. "'Bring it hither' said Hester. 'Come thou and take it up!' answered
Pearl." (pg. 193) Pearl wants no part of Hester's sin, and frankly tells Hester so. She
knows that the sin of Hester and Dimmesdale can only be borne by them, and reminds
Hester of this fact by making her retrieve that which she wrongly threw away. Hester
finally perceives this fact, but not in its deeper meaning. "But, in very truth, she is right as
regards this hateful token. I must bear its torture yet a little longer - only a few days longer
- until we shall have left this region . . . " (pg. 193) Hester reattaches the letter, but
mistakenly believes that it could ever be fully removed from her. As is seen later in the
book, Chillingworth, a symbol of punishment, is intent on following Hester and
Dimmesdale to the ends of the Earth.
Hester also reattaches this letter in order to pacify Pearl, as requested by
Dimmesdale. "'I pray you' answered the minister, 'if thou hast any means of pacifying the
child, do it forthwith! . . . I know nothing that I would not sooner encounter than this in
passion a child! . . . it has a preternatural effect. Pacify her, if thou loves me!'" (pg. 192)
The whimpering minister requests Hester to quiet Pearl by refastening the letter of shame
on her bosom. Pearl's cry remind Dimmesdale of the sin that they are both pretending they
can disown, and it bothers him.
All of these factors demand that Hester take back the symbol of her guilt. By
reaccepting this guilt, it gives Hester a chance to become the humble and faithful ultra-
Puritan that she was. Hester's reattachment of the letter also allows Hester and
Dimmesdale to share their moment of public humiliation together in the market square
upon the scaffold. When Chillingworth, a symbol of all that is evil tries to dissuade
Dimmesdale from doing this, it further adds to the joy of Dimmesdale in being relieved of
his secret sin. " (Chillingworth) 'Madman, hold! . . . Wave back that woman! Cast off this
child! All shall be well! . . . Would you bring infamy on your sacred profession?' 'Ha,
tempter! Methinks thou art to late!' answered the minister . . . 'With God's help I shall
escape thee now!'" (pg. 230) Dimmesdale joins Hester on the scaffold, that in all truth,
Hester had been on for seven years. Dimmesdale revels in his dying gasps as he is free
from his treacherous sin. "'Is this not better,' murmured he, 'than what we dreamed of in
the forest?' . . . (Hester)'Better? Yea' . . . " (pg. 231) If Hester had not retrieved her letter
in the forest, this moment would never have occurred. Hester and Dimmesdale would have
run off, but they would never be as close as they are in this scene. This is where the
retrieval of the letter helps Hester the most.
The actions of Pearl, Dimmesdale, and fate all return the letter to Hester. They
give Hester back both of what made her the sinner and the able. They also gave her a
chance to fully reconcile with Dimmesdale and her community. In the end, the pain that
Hester received when she refastened the letter to her bosom was paid back in full.
 

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