Library » Nathaniel Hawthorne
The Scarlet Letter
The plot of The Scarlet Letter is so well known there's no margin in recounting it here.

My suggestion to readers is to side-step the conventional wisdom, interpretation and muck you will encounter about this book (especially in classrooms). The obvious themes will come to you anyway. Instead I encourage you to read the book with a different eye. When I was first forced to read The Custom-House in high school, I'm sure I nearly dropped of boredom. But the second time I encountered it, I felt sorry for Hawthorne rather than myself. What was it like for an artist like Hawthorne to work in an tight and narrow institution like a Customs-House? What becomes of an artist surrounded by structure and rules, hemmed in at every side? I don't think Hawthorne enjoyed working for the man.

While The Custom-House serves its purpose as a literary device to frame the story, I wonder if it stands for more, and I cannot help but think that Nathaniel Hawthorne himself was immeasurably happier and more satisfied with his life as a writer than he was with his life as a clerk. That experience, of shaking off the conventional life of 'quiet desperation' in favor of the fluid life of an artist outside of the normal bounds of society surely made a mark on the man. I think it is no small coincidence that the characters that prosper and blossom in The Scarlet Letter are the ones that are able to do the same; even if their path is accidentally acquired rather than sought. Perhaps the freedom one can enjoy on the outside is more important than how it comes about. What would have become of Hawthorne had he stayed a clerk, would he have withered under the burden?

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Table of Contents
Preface to the Second Edition

The Custom-House

I. The Prison-Door

II. The Marketplace

III. The Recognition

IV. The Interview

V. Hester at Her Needle

VI. Pearl

VII. The Governor's Hall

VIII. The Elf-child and the Minister

IX. The Leech

X. The Leech and His Patients

XI. The Interior of a Heart

XII. The Minister's Vigil

XIV. Hester and the Physician

XIII. Another View of Hester

XV. Hester and Pearl

XVI. A Forest Walk

XVII. The Pastor and His Parishioner

XVIII. A Flood of Sunshine

XIV. The Child at the Brook-Side

XX. The Minister in a Maze

XXI. The New England Holiday

XXII. The Procession

XXIII. The Revelation of the Scarlet Letter

XXIV. The Conclusion


Library » Nathaniel Hawthorne