It enabled her to walk securely amid all peril and it kept her safe from thieves. It enabled her to walk securely amid all peril and it kept her safe from thieves.
Realising that Pearl misses the scarlet letter, which Hester has always worn in her presence. Hester picks up the letter and pins in back on her dress. Pearl then crosses the brook and hugs her mother tightly.
Hester feels that wearing the scarlet letter "A" gives her a unique perspective on human nature and the complexities of society. It allows her to see the hypocrisy and judgments of others while also giving her strength and resilience to endure her public shame. Ultimately, Hester views the letter as a symbol of her own identity and independence.
Hawthorne makes it fairly explicit that Pearl is the symbolic representation of Hester Prynne's scarlet letter: she is the product of her adultery, and as she grows, Pearl comes to embody the letter itself. When she sees her mother and Dimmesdale in the forest, then, the absence of the scarlet letter makes her mother foreign to her. The scarlet letter is her connection to her mother; in a way, she is the scarlet letter. To see her mother without it, then, is as if to see a stranger. The letter has consumed and subsumed Hester so much that without the letter, she is not the same person. Any distance between Hester and letter is, to Pearl, an impossibility, so thoroughly has Hester's life become her adultery, and taking it off is to make her unrecognizable to her daughter.
Hester Prynne's sin in Nathaniel Hawthorne's novel "The Scarlet Letter" is committing adultery with Reverend Arthur Dimmesdale. She conceives a child, Pearl, as a result of this affair, and is publicly humiliated and forced to wear a scarlet letter "A" as punishment.
Hester and Pearl run into Rev. Dimmesdale on their way to the governor's house in chapter 7 of "The Scarlet Letter." Dimmesdale stops to converse with them briefly before they continue on their way.
In Nathaniel Hawthorne's "The Scarlet Letter," Hester Prynne is the character who is forced to wear the scarlet letter "A" on her clothing as punishment for committing adultery. The Puritan community in the novel sees her as a sinner and uses the letter as a way to publicly shame and isolate her from society.
Hester believed that the only way to remove the scarlet letter's symbolic power and significance would be through living a life of repentance, self-improvement, and good deeds. She saw the letter as a constant reminder of her past sins and knew that only through her actions and behaviors could she truly overcome its influence.
Pearl demands her mother to wear the scarlet letter A openly on her chest as a way to embrace her identity and stand proudly with her. She also wants Hester to accept and acknowledge her sin rather than hiding it.
The vigil in chapter 12 of The Scarlet Letter refers to the townspeople maintaining a watchful eye on Hester Prynne's actions to ensure she does not stray from her punishment for committing adultery. It is a way for the community to enforce their moral standards and keep Hester isolated from society.
Hester actually has two sins, but you don't discover the other one until later in the book. Her first sin, which is very obvious is committing adultery. her second sin however, is marrying Chillingworth. she says that marrying him was a sin because she did not actually love him, and she knew that she could not be faithful to him. She repents for this sin.
In The Scarlet Letter, both the embroidered scarlet letter "A" and Pearl are symbols of Hester Prynne's sin of adultery. Whereas the scarlet letter is society's way of condemning Hester to a life of isolation, Pearl is the physical manifestation of Hester's sin.Perhaps the symbolic relationship between Pearl and the scarlet letter is most obvious in the woodland scene. Hester frees herself from society's hold when she removes the scarlet letter and tosses it away in the forest; however, Pearl quickly retrieves the letter and demands Hester to put it back on. Clearly, Pearl also represses and isolates Hester from the rest of the Puritanical society.
For dramatic effect, Hawthorne wanted a lot of melo-drama in the story and this was one way of getting it.Hester of course nursed Pearl, and the scarlet letter was on her (Hester's) breast (that's the blouse of course), and it was scarlet and it is obvious why Pearl should notice it and associate it with the better part of her mother.