Thursday, September 19, 2019
Importance of the Forest in The Scarlet Letter :: Scarlet Letter essays
      Importance of the Forest in The Scarlet Letter                         "The path strangled onward into  the mystery of the primeval     forest"(179).  This sentence displays just one of the multiple     personalities that the forest symbolizes in The Scarlet Letter written by     Nathaniel Hawthorn.  In the Scarlet Letter the forest symbolizes much       more than one might imagine.  Each character brings out a     different side of the forest, however the forest also brings out a     different side in each character.  For some the forest may be a place  of     sinister thoughts and wrong doing, but for others it is a place of     happiness and freedom.                         The first encounter with the  forest we have symbolizes just some of     the evil that lingers within the darkness of the forest.  As Hester  and     Pearl are leaving governor Bellinghams estate they are confronted by     mistress Hibbins who explains that the witches are meeting in the forest,     and she then invites Hester to become more deeply involved with her evil     ways.  "Wilt thou go with us tonight"(113) asked mistress Hibbins,  yet     Hester refused to sign her name in the black mans book on that night.   She     explains that the only reason she does not sign is because Pearl is still     in her life.  At this time the forest itself is a open door to  another     world, a wicked world that would take her away from her present  situation,     but that is not the only door that the forest holds.                         The forest is an open door to love  and freedom for both Hester and     Dimmesdale.  It is a place where the letter on their bodies can no  longer     have an effect on them if they choose.  A world ruled by nature and     governed by natural law as opposed to the artificial strict community  with     its man made puritan laws.  Its as if the forest represents a key to  the     shackles the Hester and Dimmesdale have been forced to wear, all that  they     have to do is unlock it.  Although if they choose not to unlock them,  they     begin to dwell on the things that they have done to deserve the shackles.     In this the forest represents a thing of truth, weather it be good or  bad.                         In pearls eyes the forest has a  totally different concept.  					    
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