Author: Nathaniel Hawthorne
Publisher: Harper & Row
Place: New York
Year: 1958
One of the best books I have ever read; well, the vocabulary could cause a problem to those who are not used to classics, even so . . . its worth a try. There is history, romance (oh, not that much) and the story can be classified as one of sin and its punishment ones, when man forgets that rules are for men, not men for rules.
Story is set in 17th century Puritan Boston which is dominated by a stern code of behaviour and an unrelenting judgement on those who sinned against it. The code was inhumanly rigid and the judgements so literal they were blind; the result was a special evil of its own.


Hester watches this painfully and confesses the truth to Arthur and they decide to leave the place together. But at the end when he sees that his time is near, he confesses his secret guilt publicly from the same spot where Hester stood convicted and dies in her arms. On his chest they find the letter 'A' marked in flesh.
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Nathaniel Hawthorne |
Chillingworth is touched and when he dies most of his property is left to little Pearl. She and her mother leave the country and Hester comes back after many years and spends the rest of her life in helping poor and needy. Pearl is married off and is well settled in the continent. Hester is buried beside Dimmesdale's grave.
A classic is a classic. It offers windows to the times. You have summarised it well. My only gripe is you have revealed the entire story.
ReplyDeleteWell, this is actually a blog providing summaries for non-readers. I don't think classics need any introductions or reveiws to be read.
DeleteI do not mind revealed classics. Anyway , I read them over and over when I forget the flow :-)
DeleteThis is the first book I read and understood in my teens. ( decades back). Even now , it holds fresh. I got hooked to English fiction reading then on..
Enjoyed your post.
Thanks.
A wonderful summary of a remarkable book. Ageless and timeless such books are.
ReplyDeleteHi Finitha,
ReplyDeleteSaw your post at the Book Blogs group and am following you. My blog is at: http://365-books-a-year.blogspot.com/
Hillary Jordan wrote a modern retelling of The Scarlet Letter. It was released last year; it's called "When She Woke". Have you read it?