Wednesday, September 4, 2019
The Scarlet Letter and the Egg-carton Essay -- Scarlet Letter essays
      The Scarlet Letter and the Egg-carton            An analogy between two subjects can often lead to a better understanding of  one or more of the topics. This point can be displayed by a comparison between  the classic novel by Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Scarlet Letter, and a normal  egg-carton. An analogy can be made between the concealment of secrets in the  novel and the concealment of the eggs by a closed egg-container. Also, a  correlation can be made between the revealing of secrets by the characters in  The Scarlet Letter and the revealing of the many eggs by an open egg-carton.  Lastly, the characters in the novel protect others as an egg carton protects its  eggs. Both an egg-carton and The Scarlet Letter provide examples of concealing,  revealing, and protecting.           As a closed egg carton hides its contents from view, so the characters in  Nathaniel Hawthorne's novel hide their shame and secrets. Certain characters in  The Scarlet Letter take great lengths to conceal their secret shame. Hester  Prynne, the adulterous lover to Reverend Dimmesdale, lied in order to conceal  the true meaning of her Scarlet Letter from her daughter, Pearl. Hester tells  Pearl, "... as for the scarlet letter, I wear it for the sake of its  gold-thread" (Hawthorne 166). Hester's guilt ridden lover, Reverend Dimmesdale,  concealed his shame as well. As he himself phrased it, "Cowardice which  invariably drew him back [from revealing he was Pearls father], with her  tremulous gripe, just when the other impulse [remorse] had hurried him to the  verge of a disclosure" (Hawthorne 136). In Dimmesdale's case, it was his fear of  shame that kept him from acknowledging his part in Pearl's creation. Besides  concealing their shame, the charact...              ... did finally figure that the Minister Dimmesdale was Hester's  lover, Hester decided to warn Dimmesdale. She warned the Minister because as she  believed, "the sacrifice of the clergyman's good name, and death itself, would  have been preferable to the alternative [Dimmesdale's torment] which she had  taken upon herself to choose." (Hawthorne 177).           The novel The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne can be compared in  several ways to an egg-carton. A closed egg-carton can conceal its contents as  characters have concealed their secrets. An open egg-container can reveal its  eggs as the characters in the novel have revealed secrets. An egg-carton can  protect its eggs and Hester Prynne can protect those who were important to her.  The novel The Scarlet Letter, when analyzed in depth, can be found to be an even  greater piece of American literature.                            
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