Thursday, September 19, 2019
The Punishment of a Sinner in The Scarlet Letter :: Scarlet Letter essays
      The Punishment of a Sinner in The Scarlet Letter                  Who should punish a sinner?  Should  it be religion, society, or the     individual?  In Hawthorne's Scarlet Letter all three affect the main  character     Hester Prynne.  Religion punishes her with the Scarlet Letter,  society     ostracizes her as punishment, and individually she was able to move on in  life     but still returned to her haunting past where she died.                   Religion plays a big part in the  Scarlet Letter.  Hester Prynne wore the     Scarlet Letter to remind her of the mistake ahe made.  Instaed of taking  Pearl     away the people wanted her to wear the "A" for adultry.  Hester brought  up her     child forcing the the thought of the heavenily father.  Hester's whole  lifestyle     was altered.  She obeyed everyone and for seven years was cursed by  standing on     the scaffold.  The people's beliefs strongly enforced the idea that  Hester would     wear the Scarlet Letter, so she did.  It constantly forced the tought of  the sin     she had commited and would haunt her for good. "I have thought have death,"  said     she, - "have wished for it, - would even have prayed for it, were it fit  that     such as I should pray for anything."                   Society was an influence on the  scarlet letter.  People of the town     believed that Hester was a witch as well as sinner.  Society ostracized  her     because no one in the town had ever delt with any kind of sin as adultry so  they     looked at her as a witch.  The people in a way wanted to ruin her life  because     people actually thought she was bad.  One of the real canadites that  wanted to     ruin Hester was Mistress Hibbins.                Through out the whole story Mistress Hibbins  constantly gives Hester her     piece of mind.           "Thou thyself wilt see it, one time or another.  They say, child, thou  art of     the lineage of the Prince of the Air!  Wilt thou ride with me, some fine  night,     to see thy father."                   Individually she was ostracized  and critizied no matter where she went.     As time went on she helped  the people proving there was a true side to  Hester     Prynne.  That led to the "A" no longer standing for adultry but for  able.  					    
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