Navalier Hawthorne's "Red Letter" in Natani El Hawthorne's "Red Letter", "Red Letter", Puritan always despises sinners like Letter Priest literally and symbolically. Using three scaffold scenes throughout the novel proved this theory and proved to be an effective way to show the differences between Puritan society and today's society. In the first scaffolding scene, Hester was taken to the scaffold from the prison she spent the last few months. The symbol and the innocence she lost.
The first scaffolding scene of The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne was held at the beginning of the novel. This is noon in June, 1642. Many Puritans gathered around Boston's scaffolding. They witnessed a public punishment by Hester Prine who committed adultery. Hester came out of prison and hugged her 3 month old child in her clothes with a red letter A. The scaffold was used only to explain offenders who violated Puritan law. It represents sin itself. When Hester and her daughter, the product of her and her lover 's sin come together, she recognizes and accepts her own shame, so her pride gradually disappears. Hester looked at a cruel gaze in the crowd and saw an elderly doctor who was deformed in the suburbs of the crowd. She soon realized that the man had been living separately for years and was her husband who had never heard of it for more than two years.
In The Scarlet Letter of Nathaniel Hawthorne, the authors used three scaffolding scenes to commemorate the development of Hester Prynne. The image of Hester about the scaffold is a metaphor of that she was forced to be alone, that she was expelled from society, and that her punishment was in vain. In the first scene, Hawthorne used a scaffold to explain that Hester did not believe "A" and the baby is genuine. In the second scaffolding scene, Hawthorne tried to tell the reader that Hester repented her sins completely, but it was not so. In the last scaffolding scene, her love for Dimmesdale is still very strong, so Hester has not repented her sins completely. Through Hester, Hawthorne tries to tell the reader that Hester is difficult to confess to adultery.
In the Scarlet Letter of Nathaniel Hawthorne, the authors used three scaffolding scenes to identify the occurrence of Hester Prynne. The story takes place in a small Puritan village in Boston in the 17th century. Hester on the scaffolding is a symbol of her being forced to be isolated, she rejects society, and her punishment is useless. In the first scene, Hawthorne used a scaffold to explain that Hester did not believe "A" and the baby is genuine. In the second scaffolding scene, Hawthorne tried to prove that Hester was asked to completely forgive his sins. In the final scaffolding scene, Hester does not forgive her sins completely for her love.