Wednesday, September 18, 2019
The Scaffolds Power in Nathaniel Hawthornes The Scarlet Letter :: Scarlet Letter essays
      The Scaffold's Power in The Scarlet Letter                Recurring events show great significance and  elucidate the truth beneath     appearances.  In The Scarlet Letter, Nathaniel Hawthorne chooses the  scaffold     scenes to show powerful differences and similarities.  Each scaffold  scene     foreshadows the next and brings greater understanding of the novel.   By     beginning with the first, continuing with the middle, and ending with the  last     platform scene, we can gain a better understanding of this masterpiece.                      At the beginning of the book, Hester is brought out  with Pearl to stand on     the scaffold.  Here the scarlet letter is revealed to all.   Reverend Dimmesdale,     Pearl's Father, is already raised up on a platform to the same height as  Hester     and Pearl; and Roger Chillingworth, Hester's lost husband, arrives, stands  below     and questions the proceedings.  As Hester endures her suffering,  Dimmesdale is     told to beseech the woman to confess.  It was said "So powerful seemed  the     ministers appeal that the people could not believe but that Hester Prynne  would     speak out  the guilty name."  His powerful speech shows  Dimmesdale's need to     confess.  This scene sets the stage for the next two scenes.                      A few years later the event is again repeated.   It is very similar to the     other and helps us understand the torment of Dimmesdale. As before the     tortured Reverend Dimmesdale goes first on to the platform.  He seeks  a     confession of his sins a second time by calling out into the night.  He  then     sees Hester and Pearl coming down the street from the governor's house.   As     before, they are asked to go up on the scaffold and be with the  minister.  At     this time Pearl questions the minister if he will do this at noontide and  he     answers no.  He once again is too much of a coward to confess out in the  open.     The similarities continue with a revelation of another scarlet letter.   Up in     the sky a scarlet "A" shines forth.  Roger Chillingworth arrives and  tells the     minister to get down from the scaffold.  Chillingworth pleads for this  so that     he can still torment the reverend.  As the two men leave, the scene ends  and     leaves us with additional information.  It foreshadows a bigger and  more     					    
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