服务承诺
资金托管
原创保证
实力保障
24小时客服
使命必达
51Due提供Essay,Paper,Report,Assignment等学科作业的代写与辅导,同时涵盖Personal Statement,转学申请等留学文书代写。
51Due将让你达成学业目标
51Due将让你达成学业目标
51Due将让你达成学业目标
51Due将让你达成学业目标私人订制你的未来职场 世界名企,高端行业岗位等 在新的起点上实现更高水平的发展
积累工作经验
多元化文化交流
专业实操技能
建立人际资源圈Scarlet_Letter_And_Symbolism
2013-11-13 来源: 类别: 更多范文
Scarlet Letter And Symbolism
In The Scarlet Letter, Nathaniel Hawthorne uses many different objects and people as symbols to express his message throughout the book. He begins using a plant, then the namesake of the book, then continues on to uses two people as symbols to get his message across. Although seemingly simple, all of these symbols are extremely complex, and used in a multitude of ways.
First, the rosebush outside the prison; in the first chapter, it is used as a symbol of hope, or maybe a symbol of redemption. It represents a glimmer of happiness outside the grim, ugly walls and heavy oaken door of the prison. Later in the book, when asked of where she came by the governor, Pearl says she was plucked
off the bush of wild roses that grew by the prison door
, as if the bush represented her mothers only salvation from the harsh prison, or even a physical manifestation of Hesters love for her daughter. This answer to this question strongly resembles Hesters openly defiant stature when asked who the father of her baby was during the first scaffold scene.
Perhaps the most complex symbol in the book is the most
scarlet, letter, hester, first, hesters, book, symbol, pearl, evil, town, symbols, show, prison, one, meaning, father, chillingsworth, being, vow, viewed, story, sign, shame, scaffold, salvation, hawthorne, even, complex, baby, admits, using, true, time, significance, rosebush

