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Scarlet Letter


            The book entitled, The Scarlet Letter, revolves around three main scaffold scenes. It was brilliantly designed by the author, Nathaniel Hawthorne, so that the first scaffold scene contains the introduction, the second contains the climax, and the third contains the conclusion. The first scene, however, truly captures the essence of the book. The first scaffold scene in The Scarlet Letter is the most important, because it introduces the plot, shows the pressures of a Puritan society and the type of strong-willed character Hester Prynne is.
             It is very difficult to read a book, not knowing any information about it. The first scaffold scene introduces many points that are vital to the understanding and reading of the book. For example, " so that both men and women, who had been familiarly acquainted with Hester Prynne, were now impressed as if they beheld her for the first time,- was that SCARLET LETTER, so fantastically embroidered and illuminated upon her bosom" (47). This quote immediately tells the reader that Hester is wearing this scarlet letter because she did something she was not supposed to. All of the men and women who previously knew her, now only looked upon her scarlet "A," which was how they would know her from then on. This scaffold scene also introduces all of the main characters. While Hester is on the scaffold, we learn that her husband, who has taken the alias Roger Chillingworth, is back from supposedly being lost at sea for many years. We also learn that Arthur Dimmesdale, an older reverend, is watching Hester, and displays a grief for her. Without the knowledge of knowing who these characters are, the book would have been much more difficult. The first scaffold scene acts as a simple but vital introduction to The Scarlet Letter.
             Puritans are known for their harsh ideals, and despicable judgment on sinners. Hester Prynne is living in a society in which there is no forgiveness for sin.


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