In society, there are always two types of people, good and bad. A nice person, your teacher's pet is always right. They follow the rules and always consider others. Then you have to meet bad guys, trouble makers who often do wrong things. They break the rules and act in their own way. Everyone is divided into several groups and is always considered good or evil. Pearls are bad at Nathaniel Hawthorn 's novel Scarlet Letter. Pearls were destined to get worse from the beginning.
In the novel "Red Letter" written by Nathaniel Hawthorne, the important person is Hester Prynne and he must put the letter "A" on the clothes of each clothes. "Look, really there is a woman with a red letter, so let's throw her mud to death" (Hawthorne, Chapter 2). The red letter is a clear sign of her sin. So everyone can judge by looking at Hester. If no one leaves her, she can not go anywhere. This red letter makes Hester an outsider of her own community.
"Red Letter" by Nathaniel Hawthorne is a book about human beings and evil. Hawthorn believes that everyone is composed mainly of good or evil, some of which are the opposite. "Red Letter" is about the life of the four people living in the town of Puritan. These four are Hester Prynne, Rev. Dimmesdale, Robert Chillingworth, and Pearl. Everyone committed his sin, but everyone did a good deed. Hester committed adultery, Ding Messada committed a hypocritical sin, Chi Ling Bosch was longing for vengeance, and a small pearl was rude in rude.
Nathaniel Hawthorne's unique "red letter" is usually in a society where people are criticized, punished and despised against personal choices and flaws. Author Nathaniel Hawthorne uses Hester Prynne in the novel "The Scarlet Letter" to symbolize that people who challenge social integration benefit society as a whole. She was banished for adultery but she believes that the community needs her. Through her bold novel "Red Letter" by Nathaniel Hawthorne, it develops around sin and punishment. The protagonist of this novel is quite contrastive on how to respond to crime. Dimmesdale's immediate reaction to crime is to tell a lie. Before he was in Hester and other parts of the town, he continued to provide a speech on how she is most interested in her and her father.