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The Scarlett Letter, Nathaniel Hawthorne. Symbolism.
Date Submitted: 10/27/2004 05:14:57
She's Worth More Than a Diamond
Pearls have always held a great price to mankind, but no pearl had ever been earned at as high a cost to a person as Hester Prynne, a powerful heroine in Nathaniel Hawthorne's novel The Scarlet Letter. Pearl, born into a Puritan prison in more ways than one, is a mysterious character serving entirely as a vehicle for symbolism.
From her introduction as an infant on her mother's scaffold
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of the deepest and most absolute love imaginable.
In the end, it is Pearl who kisses Arthur Dimmesdale, as he lies dying on the scaffold, having admitted his sin. She breaks a spell that had been over the couple in adultery, completing her service as a symbol of pain and hardship, but more importantly a symbol of love, beliefs, and the deep bond between two lovers condemned by the strict beliefs of the Puritan days.
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