Words - "Whenever it looks like her wild, bright, dark black eyes, it will give her a strange far away and invisible feel." This sentence tells her about this chapter I will introduce it to the rest of. How to talk about pearls
Tone - The tone in Chapter 6 is amazing. In this chapter, pearls are judged by her hometown and hometown. She is a terrible crime, so it is expressed as a demon or devil
Theme: The theme of Chapter 6 is judgment. As pearls come from Hester and affair, she is considered a bad person, but she is not
"......, Hester Prynne can hear her clear bird-like voice mixed with other rustic voice ..."
Here, pearls are described as birds, especially crows. Crows are never a good thing, so this has a negative meaning and always causes trouble.
Pearl asked where Hester came from. She wants to know who the father is, Hester tells her this is God, but the pearl does not believe her.
Symbol - a pearl symbolizes that all of Hester's treasure is spent on her, she is the only positive element in her life.
Indirect - Hester talked about how the pearl gazed at the letter. A narrator depicts a pearl as a bird
The direct pearl grasped the letter on Hester's chest and it shows her curiosity about the letter. She also showed curiosity when asking who her father was and where she came from.
Image - "But torn apart by a rude drama of a child, a contaminated worn-out dress makes her pictures perfect." This depicts the pearl as perfect and what she wears has an impact on it I will not give it.
Explain the meaning of pearl and its expression and define the struggle Hester and Pearl must experience everyday.
First, since the most important and influential symbol of the book is notorious scarlet letter, the title is "red". In chapter 2, Hester left the prison wearing the notorious red letter "A". In the first few years of Hester 's punishment, the letter reminded people of shame everyday. In chapter 5, Hawthorne wrote as follows. "... Hester Prynne always feels extremely painful when he feels human fear, as everyday torture becomes more sensitive." But as the story develops, this letter is Hester And anything else for people. Then in Chapter 18, Hawthorne wrote: "As we believe that Hester Prinley believes, I think that the 7-year gangsters and shame are just preparing for this time." Hester Come to Hors who is shameful of it, it did not carry out its mission.
Author Nathaniel Hawthorne has incorporated a number of rhetoric techniques into his old highly respected novel "Scarlet Letter". In chapter 5 of the novel, Hawthorne explains the crime committed by "adultery" Hester and the outcome of her violation. Metaphor, symbolism, and anthropomorphism: Hawthorne explains Hester 's life after crime and includes these devices to express his confession to Hester.