Hawthorn's "red letter" hypocrisy is often considered one of the most inescapable and predictable one, one of the most sneaky human self expressions. It is one of the simplest and most complicated aspects of mankind. Because our own voice is always strongest, we hope that we judge rather than judge all of us. Hypocrisy is paralyzed in everyday life, what is necessary is to turn on the television at our convenience and be forced to consider the meaning and meaning of our own actions.
In the "red letter", hypocrisy is everywhere. Hester, Ding Mesdale, Chillingworth, and the character of the society where the characters lived are immersed in hypocrisy. Hawthorne is not reserved to explain the terrible evil of hypocrisy; he ensures that sin is easily seen at work, at the same time similarity is defined as "red letter" with the character of today's society It will be drawn in between. The first character, Hester Prynne, promised adultery and hypocrisy.
Around. The potential evil that Hawthorne treats in "red letters" is hypocritical. Hypocrisy is an act claiming to be faith, emotion, or virtue. All three protagonists, Hester, Dimmesdale, Chillingworth, have committed false crimes. Hawthorne shows that hypocrisy is a crime by actually punishing criminals. Hester Prynne is a strong, independent woman who treated her adulter very well. She could not escape it, but accepted her punishment. However, while yielding to the court's intention, she did not believe that she immediately committed a crime. Herstar believes that she has not committed adultery because she has not really married to Chillingworth.
Nathaniel Hawthorne's "Red Letter" (1850). Hester Prine lived in a suppressed Puritan town and accused her as a victim. Hawthorne analyzed the hypocrisy behind Puritan's idea and tried to explain the general idea of New England in the 19th century. Pembroke (1894), author: Mary E. Wilkins Freeman. In Pembroke, Freeman speaks stories based on events in her mother 's house. Two fathers trying to get married will claim it. A young man was ordered from the house of his fiancée and her father ordered to break his promise. A young pursuer is a stubborn Portrait of New England, a man who is immersed in the fate of Calvinist's faith and can not draw out a woman he loves.