As life goes on, individual personality tends to weaken for judgment. In order to compare, we change the personality judging sugar to eat teeth. They are proud to brush their teeth, so sugar will not melt their teeth, so they will not change. I only brush my teeth once a day, when I awake, I spend most of my time with a dirty mouth and I return home with shining teeth. Unfortunately, I did not brush my teeth correctly every morning, so I was not harmed by sugar.
Through the use of numerous symbols, Nathanie Al Hawthorn's "red letter" serves as the allegory of the story of Adam and Eve, and the relationship between sin, knowledge and human condition in human society. For the understanding of good and evil, Adam and Eve led to the revelation of their "humanity", they received human suffering and pleasure of being human beings, so in the garden of Eden expelled from the "holy garden" I committed a crime. As Adam and Eve were expelled from society and suffering in their lives, Hester Pudding and Arthur Ding Mesdale were also "red."
"Red Letter" (Figure 1) painted by Hugues Merle in 1861 depicts Nathani Al Hawthorn's novel "Scarlet Letter". Hester Prynne, an imposter who was forced to wear the letter "A" forever for her chest, was abandoned by the community with her daughter Pearl. Mel is well known for drawing mothers and children. He explained the scenes of Hester and Pearl sitting in the city square as part of her punishment. The citizen passed by and directed their fingers to make sharp remarks.
Two literary works showing very precisely the various aspects of this society are Nathaniel Hawthorne's "Red Letter" and Arthur Miller's Ruza. "A red letter" indicates a society in which the way two people adulterily differ. A woman, Hester Pudding acknowledged that she committed a crime, was forced to wear a red letter A on her chest and was excluded from society. Pastor Dimmsdale conceals his sins from the world and is mostly worshiped by the masses, but it is full of shame in his actions. Nathanial Hawthorm explains how insensitive to the people Puritan society admits their fraud.
In Nathanial Hawthorne's "red letter", the crimes of adultery committed by Arthur Dimmesdale and Hester Prynne were thought to be very wrong by society. He imposed large punishment on Hester Prynne and gave her a red letter "A" for adultery. Arthur Dimmesdale only accepted the punishment of his sin. Unlike society, nature is a place where sin is not appreciated, in fact, this is itself a place of sin. Pearls, blacks, and Roger are examples of evil that brings sin from the forest into the city and symbolizes the nature in the forest.