Puritan's hypocrisy was revealed with a "red letter", and Hawthorne repeatedly portrays Puritan's view of sin and evil. Puritan continued to show that believing in evil comes from a loose connection between love and hatred. For this reason, they regard Hester's adultery as a pure convicted evil. But with the images of light and darkness, Hawthorne shows truly evil people in the heart. As an evil incarnation, it creates hypocrisy for Puritan's view of sin and evil. Hawthorne shows that there are the most people who open sin and sunlight in general.
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.
Nathaniel Hawthorne's "red letter" is basically a story about sin, punishment, hypocrisy. In a wonderful romance. Hawthorne deals with the conflict between Massachusetts' young woman and the strict law of the 17th century Puritan society. Those familiar with American literature may think it is easy to find that by the year 1850 the number of these novels is enough to form a new type. However, unlike many novels published in the United States on the same issue, Hawthorne's story has its own unique features. Originality has become one of the most criticized and commentary books in the United States since its publication, as it has pushed the interest of many readers.
During the period when the novel was written. In Nathaniel Hawthorne's "red letter", Puritan's hypocrisy is the subject of the entire novel by the action and belief of the Puritan community. One of the best examples of Puritan's hypocrisy was in the last line of the novel, and the information was carved in the headstone of Hester and Ding Mesdale in "Field, Black, Letter A, Red" (Hawthorne 203) It was. In the black field, the letter "A" is in bold red. Ironically