I am now more than halfway into the text of The Scarlet Letter.
According to the author, wearing the "A" was a living sermon against
sin. Hester was sparred death because her husband had gone out to sea
making the adulterous behavior less offensive because he is thought to be
dead. But he returns (showed up at the scaffold and then went to see
Hester in prison) and now posing as a doctor of medicine and going by the name
Roger Chillingworth). He tells Hester that they wronged each other.
His wrong was making her marry him when she did not love him and then deserting
her. And although he does not want to hurt her, he is determined to
figure out who the father is and reveal him. I find this strange because
if he realizes he did wrong by Hester, then why does he care who the father is
and vow to expose him. He says that few things are hidden "from the
man who devotes himself earnestly and unreservedly to the solution of a
mystery." Sooner or later, he is going to uncover the father.
He says that he will read it on his heart and he will let him live but he will
seek to ruin his soul. Sounds like a horror movie to me, definitely not a
romance.
So, we know what is going to happen. Hester's long lost thought to be
dead husband is going to figure out who the father is and torture him.
This seems odd to me. It seems like he does not love Hester because
reveling the father will only make the people more enraged, so why not leave
the father alone. Hester does not want to expose him, so why is he
determined to do so? Jealousy? Revenge on the one who got away with
the crime? Or maybe he's just evil? Some people love making other
people miserable. They are fulfilled by the misfortunes of others.
This is a terrible character flaw. Although I do not think it is fair for
Hester to suffer alone and the father to "get away" with his
participation in this, I do not think it should be someone else who makes it
their mission to solve the mystery and bring more humiliation to this
situation. I guess if I think of it like a crime (as that is what it was
considered in 17th century America), then Hester's husband is uncovering a
criminal. . .I guess that makes more sense on why he is doing it.
Meanwhile,
Hester’s child, Pearl is growing up. She is described as angelic, full of
life, intelligent, strange, and elfish. I think she sounds awesome.
She is full of life and of course she is odd. She is recluse from
society. She has only her mom and when around others, they point at her,
run from her, and isolate her. I think it’s a miracle she is not a
demon. This really could be a horror film. So I will read on about how
the father will be uncovered and tortured and how Hester and Pearl will
continue to be demonized and mistreated. Good stuff.
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